http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25407270
Abstract
Excitotoxicity
is a major contributor to cell death during the acute phase of ischemic
stroke but aggressive pharmacological targeting of excitotoxicity has
failed clinically. Here we investigated whether pretreatment with low
doses of memantine, within the range currently used and well tolerated
for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, produce a protective effect in
stroke. A coculture preparation exposed to modeled ischemia showed cell
death associated with rapid glutamate rises and cytotoxic Ca(2+)
influx. Cell death was significantly enhanced in the presence of high
memantine concentrations. However, low memantine concentrations
significantly protected neurons and glia via excitotoxic cascade
interruption. Mice were systemically administered a range of memantine
doses (0.02, 0.2, 2, 10, and 20 mg/kg/day) starting 24 hours before
60 minutes reversible focal cerebral ischemia and continuing for a
48-hour recovery period. Low dose (0.2 mg/kg/day) memantine treatment
significantly reduced lesion volume (by 30% to 50%) and improved
behavioral outcomes in stroke lesions that had been separated into
either small/striatal or large/striatocortical infarcts. However, higher
doses of memantine (20 mg/kg/day) significantly increased injury. These
results show that clinically established low doses of memantine should
be considered for patients 'at risk' of stroke, while higher doses are
contraindicated.
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