Hypoxic-ischemic brain injury
- 1 June 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Pediatrics
- Vol. 11 (3), 223-228
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00008480-199906000-00009
Abstract
Hypoxic-ischemic brain injury occurs frequently in infancy and childhood. Events such as perinatal asphyxia, near drowning, respiratory arrest, and near sudden infant death syndrome Cause significant mortality and morbidity. Despite current critical care practices, the outcomes from such injuries may be life-long neurologic deficits. This review discusses findings from laboratory investigations into such injuries-in particular the roles of excitotoxic amino acids, proteolytic enzymes, free radicals, nitric oxide, and leukocytes. Understanding of the two distinct forms of neuronal death, necrosis and apoptosis, provides additional insights into mechanisms of injury. The development of new therapies for hypoxic-ischemic brain injury depends on such understanding. To date, the results of preclinical therapeutic trials have not demonstrated a “magic bullet‘ Nevertheless, the understanding of injury mechanisms has uncovered potential avenues for new therapies, particularly combination therapies or single interventions that have multiple effects. Clinical trials, using these strategies, are planned or have been recently begun and offer hope for advancements in treatment. Curr Opin Pediatr 1999, 11223–228 © 1999 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Inc.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Delayed Reduction of Ischemic Brain Injury and Neurological Deficits in Mice Lacking the Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase GeneJournal of Neuroscience, 1997
- Glutamate-induced neuronal death: A succession of necrosis or apoptosis depending on mitochondrial functionNeuron, 1995
- Transgenic Mice and Knockout Mutants in the Study of Oxidative Stress in Brain InjuryJournal of Neurotrauma, 1995
- Effects of Cerebral Ischemia in Mice Deficient in Neuronal Nitric Oxide SynthaseScience, 1994
- Granulocyte adhesion, deformability, and superoxide formation in acute stroke.Stroke, 1992
- Oxygen radical mechanisms of brain injury following ischemia and reperfusionJournal of Applied Physiology, 1991
- Chemistry and biochemistry of 4-hydroxynonenal, malonaldehyde and related aldehydesFree Radical Biology & Medicine, 1991
- Experimental Biology of Cerebral Hypoxia-Ischemia: Relation to Perinatal Brain DamagePediatric Research, 1990
- Calcium, Excitotoxins, and Neuronal Death in the BrainaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1989
- Calpain I activation is specifically related to excitatory amino acid induction of hippocampal damageJournal of Neuroscience, 1989