Abstract

Changes in the extracellular levels of excitatory and inhibitory amino acid transmitters were studied in the rat striatum during penumbral ischaemia using intracerebral microdialysis. Effects of penumbral forebrain ischaemia were compared with those of ischaemia with sustained anoxic depolarisation and K+ (100 mM). Comparisons were also made between different groups of animals at 2 and 24 h after dialysis probe implantation. The K+ stimulus did not provoke any release of excitatory amino acids in the 24-h group, probably reflecting a decrease of functional synapses adjacent to the probe. During 30 min of penumbral ischaemia, excitatory amino acids did not reach critical concentrations in the extracellular fluid, and increases in levels of inhibitory/modulatory amino acids were similar. On the other hand, severe transient ischaemia resulted in massive synchronous release of many neuroactive excitatory and inhibitory compounds, in both the 2- and 24-h groups. These and other data suggest that changes during severe ischaemia may arise from both neurotransmitter and metabolic pools. It is concluded that ischaemic damage in the penumbra may not be related to extracellular neuroactive amino acid changes generated within this region.

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