Abstract

Twenty-seven pigtailed monkeys (Macaca nemestrina) were subjected to 17 min of complete cerebral ischemia followed by 96 h of intensive care treatment. Fourteen of the monkeys were assigned randomly to the treatment group and received nimodipine 10 micrograms . kg-1 5 min postischemia followed by 1 microgram . kg-1 . min-1 for 10 h. Six monkeys (three treated) failed to meet preestablished protocol criteria and were excluded. The remaining treated and untreated monkeys were well matched for age, sex, and other physiologic variables. Neurologic outcome at 96 h postischemia was significantly better in the nimodipine-treated monkeys than in the controls. Eight of the 11 treated animals had an apparent normal level of consciousness; four of these had no detectable neurologic deficits and a fifth had only a slight motor apraxia. Only two of the 10 untreated animals had an apparent normal level of consciousness, and all had major neurologic deficits. Histopathologic examination showed variable ischemic neuronal change and infarction to involve gray matter in distal arterial perfusion zones. Significant white matter changes were not observed. A histopathologic scoring system yielded a significantly better mean score for the treated group than for the untreated group, and there was significant correlation between neurologic function and histopathologic findings. The authors conclude that nimodipine improves the neurologic outcome when given after an episode of complete cerebral ischemia in primates, and they recommend controlled clinical trials in patients resuscitated after cardiac arrest.

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