Neuroprotective effects of edaravone: a novel free radical scavenger in cerebrovascular injury.

CNS Drug Rev

Department of Internal Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Kashiwa Hospital, Jikei University School of Medicine, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan.

Published: September 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recanalization and neuroprotection are crucial in treating acute ischemic stroke, with free radicals playing a major role in damaging neuron membranes and causing cell death.
  • Edaravone is a new drug that acts as a free radical scavenger, helping to protect neurons from damage by reducing endothelial injury and improving blood flow during ischemia.
  • Clinical data suggests edaravone has a broad therapeutic window, and combining it with thrombolytic therapy could decrease brain edema and enhance recovery in stroke patients.

Article Abstract

Recanalization and neuroprotection have been mainly targeted for the specific treatment of acute ischemic stroke. Free radicals play a crucial role in brain ischemic injury by exacerbating membrane damage through peroxidation of unsaturated fatty acids of cell membrane, leading to neuronal death and brain edema. Free radicals have been implicated in stroke pathophysiology as pivotal contributors to cell injury. Edaravone (3-methyl-1-phenyl-2-pyrazolin-5-one) is a novel potent free radical scavenger that has been clinically used to reduce the neuronal damage following ischemic stroke. Edaravone exerts neuroprotective effects by inhibiting endothelial injury and by ameliorating neuronal damage in brain ischemia. Edaravone provides the desirable features of NOS: it increases eNOS (beneficial NOS for rescuing ischemic stroke) and decreases nNOS and iNOS (detrimental NOS). Post- reperfusion brain edema and hemorrhagic events induced by thrombolytic therapy may be reduced by edaravone pretreatment. Increased productions of superoxide and NO in the brain after reperfusion and a concomitant surge in oxygen free radicals with increased NO during recirculation lead to formation of peroxynitrite, a superpotent radical. Edaravone, which inhibits oxidation and enhances NO production derived from increased eNOS expression, may improve and conserve cerebral blood flow without peroxynitrite generation during reperfusion. Clinical experience with edaravone suggests that this drug has a wide therapeutic time window. The combination therapy (a thrombolytic plus edaravone) is likely to target brain edema, reduce stroke death and improve the recovery from neurological deficits in stoke patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6741743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1527-3458.2006.00009.xDOI Listing

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