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Life on the battlefield: Valproic acid for combat applications
- Source :
- The journal of trauma and acute care surgery. 89(2S Suppl 2)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- The leading causes of death in military conflicts continue to be hemorrhagic shock (HS) and traumatic brain injury (TBI). Most of the mortality is a result of patients not surviving long enough to obtain surgical care. As a result, there is a significant unmet need for a therapy that stimulates a "prosurvival phenotype" that counteracts the cellular pathophysiology of HS and TBI to prolong survival. Valproic acid (VPA), a well-established antiepileptic therapy for more than 50 years, has shown potential as one such prosurvival therapy. This review details how VPA's role as a nonselective histone deacetylase inhibitor induces cellular changes that promote survival and decrease cellular pathways that lead to cell death. The review comprehensively covers more than two decades worth of studies ranging from preclinical (mice, swine) to recent human clinical trials of the use of VPA in HS and TBI. Furthermore, it details the different mechanisms in which VPA alters gene expression, induces cytoprotective changes, attenuates platelet dysfunction, provides neuroprotection, and enhances survival in HS and TBI. Valproic acid shows real promise as a therapy that can induce the prosurvival phenotype in those injured during military conflict.
- Subjects :
- Programmed cell death
Traumatic brain injury
medicine.drug_class
Resuscitation
Gene Expression
Kaplan-Meier Estimate
Shock, Hemorrhagic
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Bioinformatics
Neuroprotection
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Brain Injuries, Traumatic
medicine
Animals
Humans
Military Medicine
Valproic Acid
business.industry
Histone deacetylase inhibitor
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
Armed Conflicts
medicine.disease
Phenotype
Pathophysiology
Clinical trial
Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors
Military Personnel
War-Related Injuries
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Surgery
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21630763
- Volume :
- 89
- Issue :
- 2S Suppl 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The journal of trauma and acute care surgery
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0a527d5606a9276c5a14b4e9aa492551