Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro.

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Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro. / Kaur, Jaspreet; Flores Gutiérrez, Javier ; Nistri, Andrea.

In: The European journal of neuroscience, 18.08.2016, p. 2418-2430.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kaur, J, Flores Gutiérrez, J & Nistri, A 2016, 'Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro.', The European journal of neuroscience, pp. 2418-2430. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.13353

APA

Kaur, J., Flores Gutiérrez, J., & Nistri, A. (2016). Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro. The European journal of neuroscience, 2418-2430. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.13353

Vancouver

Kaur J, Flores Gutiérrez J, Nistri A. Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro. The European journal of neuroscience. 2016 Aug 18;2418-2430. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.13353

Author

Kaur, Jaspreet ; Flores Gutiérrez, Javier ; Nistri, Andrea. / Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro. In: The European journal of neuroscience. 2016 ; pp. 2418-2430.

Bibtex

@article{3d3494850ebb4307846bee3244c7eb3c,
title = "Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro.",
abstract = "Although neuroprotection to contain the initial damage of spinal cord injury (SCI) is difficult, multicentre studies show that early neurosurgery under general anaesthesia confers positive benefits. An interesting hypothesis is that the general anaesthetic itself might largely contribute to neuroprotection, although in vivo clinical settings hamper studying this possibility directly. To further test neuroprotective effects of a widely used general anaesthetic, we studied if propofol could change the outcome of a rat isolated spinal cord SCI model involving excitotoxicity evoked by 1 h application of kainate with delayed consequences on neurons and locomotor network activity. Propofol (5 μm; 4-8 h) enhanced responses to GABA and depressed those to NMDA together with decrease in polysynaptic reflexes that partly recovered after 1 day washout. Fictive locomotion induced by dorsal root stimuli or NMDA and serotonin was weaker the day after propofol application. Kainate elicited a significant loss of spinal neurons, especially motoneurons, whose number was halved. When propofol was applied for 4-8 h after kainate washout, strong neuroprotection was observed in all spinal areas, including attenuation of motoneuron loss. Although propofol had minimal impact on recovery of electrophysiological characteristics 24 h later, it did not further depress network activity. A significant improvement in disinhibited burst periodicity suggested potential to ameliorate neuronal excitability in analogy to histological data. Functional recovery of locomotor networks perhaps required longer time due to the combined action of excitotoxicity and anaesthetic depression at 24 h. These results suggest propofol could confer good neuroprotection to spinal circuits during experimental SCI.",
author = "Jaspreet Kaur and {Flores Guti{\'e}rrez}, Javier and Andrea Nistri",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1111/ejn.13353",
language = "English",
pages = "2418--2430",
journal = "The European journal of neuroscience",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neuroprotective effect of propofol against excitotoxic injury to locomotor networks of the rat spinal cord in vitro.

AU - Kaur, Jaspreet

AU - Flores Gutiérrez, Javier

AU - Nistri, Andrea

PY - 2016/8/18

Y1 - 2016/8/18

N2 - Although neuroprotection to contain the initial damage of spinal cord injury (SCI) is difficult, multicentre studies show that early neurosurgery under general anaesthesia confers positive benefits. An interesting hypothesis is that the general anaesthetic itself might largely contribute to neuroprotection, although in vivo clinical settings hamper studying this possibility directly. To further test neuroprotective effects of a widely used general anaesthetic, we studied if propofol could change the outcome of a rat isolated spinal cord SCI model involving excitotoxicity evoked by 1 h application of kainate with delayed consequences on neurons and locomotor network activity. Propofol (5 μm; 4-8 h) enhanced responses to GABA and depressed those to NMDA together with decrease in polysynaptic reflexes that partly recovered after 1 day washout. Fictive locomotion induced by dorsal root stimuli or NMDA and serotonin was weaker the day after propofol application. Kainate elicited a significant loss of spinal neurons, especially motoneurons, whose number was halved. When propofol was applied for 4-8 h after kainate washout, strong neuroprotection was observed in all spinal areas, including attenuation of motoneuron loss. Although propofol had minimal impact on recovery of electrophysiological characteristics 24 h later, it did not further depress network activity. A significant improvement in disinhibited burst periodicity suggested potential to ameliorate neuronal excitability in analogy to histological data. Functional recovery of locomotor networks perhaps required longer time due to the combined action of excitotoxicity and anaesthetic depression at 24 h. These results suggest propofol could confer good neuroprotection to spinal circuits during experimental SCI.

AB - Although neuroprotection to contain the initial damage of spinal cord injury (SCI) is difficult, multicentre studies show that early neurosurgery under general anaesthesia confers positive benefits. An interesting hypothesis is that the general anaesthetic itself might largely contribute to neuroprotection, although in vivo clinical settings hamper studying this possibility directly. To further test neuroprotective effects of a widely used general anaesthetic, we studied if propofol could change the outcome of a rat isolated spinal cord SCI model involving excitotoxicity evoked by 1 h application of kainate with delayed consequences on neurons and locomotor network activity. Propofol (5 μm; 4-8 h) enhanced responses to GABA and depressed those to NMDA together with decrease in polysynaptic reflexes that partly recovered after 1 day washout. Fictive locomotion induced by dorsal root stimuli or NMDA and serotonin was weaker the day after propofol application. Kainate elicited a significant loss of spinal neurons, especially motoneurons, whose number was halved. When propofol was applied for 4-8 h after kainate washout, strong neuroprotection was observed in all spinal areas, including attenuation of motoneuron loss. Although propofol had minimal impact on recovery of electrophysiological characteristics 24 h later, it did not further depress network activity. A significant improvement in disinhibited burst periodicity suggested potential to ameliorate neuronal excitability in analogy to histological data. Functional recovery of locomotor networks perhaps required longer time due to the combined action of excitotoxicity and anaesthetic depression at 24 h. These results suggest propofol could confer good neuroprotection to spinal circuits during experimental SCI.

U2 - 10.1111/ejn.13353

DO - 10.1111/ejn.13353

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27468970

SP - 2418

EP - 2430

JO - The European journal of neuroscience

JF - The European journal of neuroscience

ER -

ID: 275143896