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DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-978577
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York
Topical Glucose and Accumulation of Excitotoxic and Other Amino Acids in Ischemic Cerebral Cortex
Publication History
1999
1999
Publication Date:
19 April 2007 (online)
Pre-ischemic hyperglycemia aggravates brain damage due to transient global ischemia as demonstrated by exacerbation of brain lesions. Lactacidosis and elevated glutamate levels have been implicated as mechanisms of the increased damage. Our objective was to determine the effects of different levels of glucose (0, 66.5, 450 mg/dL) in cortical superfusates on the ischemia/reperfusion-evoked release of amino acids from the rat cerebral cortex. Physiologic levels of glucose significantly reduced the amount of aspartate, glutamate and γ-aminobutyric acid and the supra-physiologic levels of glucose reduced the amount of aspartate and phosphoethanolamine released from the cortex during ischemia/reperfusion in comparison with no glucose. The decrease in glutamate release may be due to increased availability of glucose for glycolysis with the subsequent formation of ATP and lactate, which has been shown to act as an energy source for neurons. The decreased levels may also reflect the continued energy-dependent uptake of glutamate by glial cells.
Key words
Glutamate - Aspartate - Hyperglycemia - Cerebral Ischemia - Reperfusion