NEUROTOXICITY OF VINCRISTINE AFTER THE OSMOTIC OPENING OF THE BLOOD‐BRAIN BARRIER

Abstract
The direct effect of intravascularly injected vincristine on the rat brain was investigated after the osmotic opening of the blood-brain barrier. This was opened unilaterally by injecting 2.5 ml of 1.4 molal mannitol solution into the right carotid artery through a cannula inserted in the external carotid artery in retrograde fashion. Vincristine (0.75 mg/kg) was then injected into either the carotid artery or into a vein. Animals, thus treated, developed left hemiparesis and choreo-athetoid head motion within several days. Microscopical analysis revealed intracytoplasmic eosinophilic inclusions at an early period, neuronal argyrophilic change an axonal thickening with spheroid formation at later times and glial mitotic arrest, a finding not reported previously with intrathecal injection of vincristine. Neuronal changes were usually confined to the selected area in the midbrain, whereas glial mitotic figures were seen in the hippocampus, midbrain and cerebellum. These changes may be direct effects of the vincristine binding with cellular microtubules, including mitotic spindle tubules and neurotubules. The transient opening of the blood-brain barrier seems to be a useful technique for studying the experimental neurotoxicology of drugs to which the blood-brain barrier is impermeable.

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