1. An experimental study on the effects of DMSO and indomethacin on cerebral circulation and intracranial pressure
- Author
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Susanne Moore, Howard Tung, Hector E. James, and John C. Drummond
- Subjects
Intracranial Pressure ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Indomethacin ,Hemodynamics ,Brain Edema ,Blood flow ,Lesion ,Cerebral circulation ,Bolus (medicine) ,Cerebral blood flow ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Edema ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Animals ,Dimethyl Sulfoxide ,Rabbits ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Intracranial pressure - Abstract
Albino rabbits with a cryogenic lesion to the left parieto-occipital cortex had cerebral blood flow studies (CBF) with the hydrogen clearance technique 24 hours after the insult. Similar subgroups were treated with DMSO (1 g/kg) bolus, DMSO (2 g/kg) infusion, indomethacin (20 mg/kg) bolus, and indomethacin followed by DMSO. Following DMSO bolus administration there was an immediate rise in CBF over both hemispheres, with a significant paradoxical decrease at 30 minutes, followed by a second smaller rise at 60 minutes. With DMSO infusion, the rise in CBF was sustained throughout the infusion period with no paradoxical decrease. With indomethacin there was an initial decrease immediately following the drug, and at 60 minutes there was a rise in the insulted left hemisphere, more than the right one. Indomethacin administration 15 minutes prior to DMSO failed to halt the immediate increase in CBF noted following DMSO bolus injection. These results, together with the changes that occurred in intracranial pressure and brain water content, are analyzed.
- Published
- 1986
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