永久性受损的大脑能否在慢性中风阶段得到修复

Zhao LiRu
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引用次数: 37

摘要

S和创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是全球人类死亡和残疾的主要原因。不幸的是,对于中风和脑外伤患者,几乎没有有效的治疗方法。大多数先前和当前的实验性治疗都集中在影响一个信号通路,调节单个膜蛋白/通道/受体(如NMDA受体)或针对一种细胞死亡机制(如凋亡)。近年来使用这些方法的许多临床试验的失败已经产生了一个共识,即对于复杂的中枢神经系统疾病(如脑缺血和TBI)有效的治疗,它需要对多种途径和多种细胞类型具有压倒性的保护作用。到目前为止,对于急性脑卒中/TBI患者,还没有真正的多面性和临床可行的治疗方法。然而,有一种潜在的治疗方法因其对大脑、心脏和其他器官的多种保护作用而脱颖而出:低温疗法。在动物和人类研究中,轻度至中度低温对脑缺血显示出显著的神经保护作用(高达90%的梗死减少)。现有的物理冷却技术的一些缺点是它们速度慢(3小时),不实用,这阻碍了低温疗法的临床应用。因此,可以用于低温治疗的化合物长期以来一直被寻求用于临床治疗。使用药物诱导的低温治疗,预计即使是很小的体温下降(1-2℃)也有利于预防有害的伤后热疗,延缓继发性损伤的发展,从而延长其他干预措施的治疗窗口期。我们已经开发出新的神经紧张素衍生物,如ABS201、ABS601和ABS363,它们可以通过血脑屏障诱导“调节低体温”,在大约30分钟内将身体和大脑温度降低3-5°C,而不会引起颤抖。系统研究、血液检查和尸体解剖检查显示这些化合物没有毒性或副作用。缺血后给予这些化合物可显著减轻缺血引起的神经元细胞死亡、血脑屏障损伤和改善功能恢复。在出血性卒中小鼠模型中,在卒中发生24小时后给予ABS201仍显示出显著的神经保护和功能益处。我们最近的研究也显示了药物性低温对TBI的保护作用。因此,这些化合物提供了一种新的治疗方法,充分利用了治疗性低温,但没有明显的副作用。药物性低温治疗有望成为全球范围内一类新的脑保护药物,并有助于将化学/药物性低温治疗转化为临床应用。
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Can a permanent damaged brain be repairable in the phase of chronic stroke
S and traumatic brain injury (TBI) are leading cause of human death and disability across the globe. Unfortunately, there are very few effective therapies for stroke and TBI patients. Most previous and current experimental treatments have focused on affecting one signaling pathway, regulating an individual membrane protein/channel/receptor (e.g. NMDA receptor) or targeting one type of cell death mechanism (e.g. apoptosis). The failure of many clinical trials that have used these approaches in recent years has generated the consensus that for a therapy to be effective against complicated CNS disorders such as cerebral ischemia and TBI, it requires overwhelming protective effects on multiple pathways and multiple cell types. So far, there has been no therapy that is truly multifaceted and clinically feasible for acute stroke/TBI patients. One potential therapy, however, stands out for its versatile protective effects on the brain, heart and other organs: Hypothermia therapy. Mild-to-moderate hypothermia has shown remarkable neuroprotective effects (up to 90% infarct reduction) against brain ischemia in animal and human studies. Some of the drawbacks to available cooling techniques of physical means are that they are slow (3 hrs) and not practical, which have hampered clinical applications of hypothermia therapy. Thus, chemical compounds that can be utilized for hypothermia therapy have long been sought after for clinical treatments. Using drug-induced hypothermia, it is expected that even a small drop in body temperature (1-2°C) is beneficial for preventing the detrimental post-injury hyperthermia, delay the evolution of the secondary injury, and thereafter extend the therapeutic window for other interventions. We have developed novel neurotensin derivatives such as ABS201, ABS601, and ABS363 that can pass through the blood-brain barrier to induce “regulated hypothermia”, reducing body and brain temperature by 3-5°C in around 30 min without causing shivering. Systemic studies, blood tests, and autopsy examinations showed no toxic or adverse effects of these compounds. Post-ischemic administration of these compounds markedly attenuates ischemiainduced neuronal cell death, blood-brain barrier damage and improved functional recovery. In a hemorrhagic stroke model of the mouse, ABS201 administration 24 hrs after the onset of stroke still showed significant neuroprotection and functional benefits. Our recent investigation also showed protective effects of drug-induced hypothermia against TBI. These compounds thus provide a novel therapy that takes full advantage of therapeutic hypothermia but with no obvious side effects. It is expected that drug-induced hypothermia can be developed as a new category of global brain protection drugs and help to translate the chemical/pharmacological hypothermic therapy into clinical applications.
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