Well, well, how much more proof is needed to utilize this?
http://www.biosciencetechnology.com/news/2014/03/halting-immune-response-could-save-brain-cells-after-stroke?
A new study in animals shows that
using a compound to block the body’s immune response greatly reduces
disability after a stroke.
The study by scientists from the University of Wisconsin School of
Medicine and Public Health also showed that particular immune cells—CD4+
T-cells produce a mediator, called interleukin (IL)-21 that can cause
further damage in stroke tissue.
Moreover, normal mice, ordinarily killed or disabled by an ischemic
stroke, were given a shot of a compound that blocks the action of IL-21.
Brain scans and brain sections showed that the treated mice suffered
little or no stroke damage.
“This is very exciting because we haven’t had a new drug for stroke
in decades, and this suggests a target for such a drug,” says lead
author Dr. Zsuzsanna Fabry, professor of pathology and laboratory
medicine.
Stroke is the fourth-leading killer in the world and an important
cause of permanent disability. In an ischemic stroke, a clot blocks the
flow of oxygen-rich blood to the brain. But Fabry explains that much of
the damage to brain cells occurs after the clot is removed or dissolved
by medicine. Blood rushes back into the brain tissue, bringing with it
immune cells called T-cells, which flock to the source of an injury.
The study shows that after a stroke, the injured brain cells provoke
the CD4+ T-cells to produce a substance, IL-21, that kills the neurons
in the blood-deprived tissue of the brain. The study gave new insight
how stroke induces neural injury.
Similar Findings in Humans
Fabry’s co-author Dr. Matyas Sandor, professor of pathology and
laboratory medicine, says that the final part of the study looked at
brain tissue from people who had died following ischemic strokes. It
found that CD4+ T-cells and their protein, IL-21 are in high
concentration in areas of the brain damaged by the stroke.
Sandor says the similarity suggests that the protein that blocks
IL-21 could become a treatment for stroke, and would likely be
administered at the same time as the current blood-clot dissolving
drugs.
“We don’t have proof that it will work in humans,” he says, “but
similar accumulation of IL-21 producing cells suggests that it might.”
The paper was published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.
Source: University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health
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