AI Article Synopsis

  • Lipid peroxidation, linked to reactive oxygen species (ROS), plays a role in traumatic brain injury (TBI), and managing it could serve as a treatment strategy.
  • The drug edaravone, known for its neuroprotective properties in acute ischemic stroke, is currently the only approved medication for blocking lipid peroxidation, but its effect on alkoxyl radicals (OR-) remains unclear.
  • A study utilizing an innovative electron spin resonance method demonstrated that edaravone effectively scavenges OR-, significantly lowering its levels in TBI patients’ blood after treatment, highlighting the method's potential to assess oxidative stress in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

Lipid peroxidation is caused by reactive oxygen species (ROS) and is involved in traumatic brain injury (TBI). Consequently, a therapeutic strategy for TBI may be to control lipid peroxidation. The only drug approved to date for blocking lipid peroxidation is edaravone (MCI-186), a novel free-radical scavenger shown to exert neuroprotective effects in acute ischemic stroke. Although edaravone scavenges hydroxyl and nitric oxide radicals, its effect on alkoxyl radicals (OR-), which also contribute to lipid peroxidation, is unknown. To date, the study of free radicals in blood has been severely hampered by technical difficulties in their detection. We used an in vitro and ex vivo electron spin resonance (ESR) method employing 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide as a spin trap to investigate whether edaravone can scavenge OR-. By mixing either methemoglobin or human blood with tert-butyl hydroperoxide, we found that this technique can detect OR- generated in vitro. We also found that generated OR- can be completely absorbed by administration of edaravone in vitro (400 microM). Analysis of jugular venous blood collected from 17 TBI patients immediately before and 20 minutes after the administration of edaravone (30 mg, i.v.) revealed higher OR- levels in the untreated patients blood than in normal control blood samples. However, treatment with edaravone suppressed these OR- levels by 24.6% (radical intensity = 71.1 +/- 5.2-53.6 +/- 5.2; p < 0.01). Thus, edaravone can scavenge OR- and significantly reduce levels of these radicals in TBI patients. The novel ex vivo ESR method described here provides a valuable clinical measure of oxidative stress.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2006.23.1591DOI Listing

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