An acute injury to brain or spinal cord produces profound metabolic perturbation that extends and exacerbates tissue damage. Recent clinical interventions to treat this condition with i.v. Mg2+ to stabilize its extracellular concentration provided disappointing results. The present study used an in vitro spinal cord model from the neonatal rat to investigate the role of extracellular Mg2+ in the lesion evoked by a pathological medium mimicking the metabolic perturbation (hypoxia, aglycemia, oxidative stress, and acid pH) occurring in vivo. Damage was measured by taking as outcome locomotor network activity for up to 24 h after the primary insult. Pathological medium in 1 mM Mg2+ solution (1 h) largely depressed spinal reflexes and suppressed fictive locomotion on the same and the following day. Conversely, pathological medium in either Mg2+-free or 5 mM Mg2+ solution evoked temporary network depression and enabled fictive locomotion the day after. While global cell death was similar regardless of extracellular Mg2+ solution, white matter was particularly affected. In ventral horn the number of surviving neurons was the highest in Mg2+ free solution and the lowest in 1 mM Mg2+, while motoneurons were unaffected. Although the excitotoxic damage elicited by kainate was insensitive to extracellular Mg2+, 1 mM Mg2+ potentiated the effect of combining pathological medium with kainate at low concentrations. These results indicate that preserving Mg2+ homeostasis rendered experimental spinal injury more severe. Furthermore, analyzing ventral horn neuron numbers in relation to fictive locomotion expression might provide a first estimate of the minimal size of the functional locomotor network.

Extracellular magnesium enhances the damage to locomotor networks produced by metabolic perturbation mimicking spinal injury in the neonatal rat spinal cord in vitro / Margaryan, G.; Mladinic, M.; Mattioli, C.; Nistri, A.. - In: NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 0306-4522. - 163:2(2009), pp. 669-682. [10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.07.005]

Extracellular magnesium enhances the damage to locomotor networks produced by metabolic perturbation mimicking spinal injury in the neonatal rat spinal cord in vitro

Nistri, A.
2009-01-01

Abstract

An acute injury to brain or spinal cord produces profound metabolic perturbation that extends and exacerbates tissue damage. Recent clinical interventions to treat this condition with i.v. Mg2+ to stabilize its extracellular concentration provided disappointing results. The present study used an in vitro spinal cord model from the neonatal rat to investigate the role of extracellular Mg2+ in the lesion evoked by a pathological medium mimicking the metabolic perturbation (hypoxia, aglycemia, oxidative stress, and acid pH) occurring in vivo. Damage was measured by taking as outcome locomotor network activity for up to 24 h after the primary insult. Pathological medium in 1 mM Mg2+ solution (1 h) largely depressed spinal reflexes and suppressed fictive locomotion on the same and the following day. Conversely, pathological medium in either Mg2+-free or 5 mM Mg2+ solution evoked temporary network depression and enabled fictive locomotion the day after. While global cell death was similar regardless of extracellular Mg2+ solution, white matter was particularly affected. In ventral horn the number of surviving neurons was the highest in Mg2+ free solution and the lowest in 1 mM Mg2+, while motoneurons were unaffected. Although the excitotoxic damage elicited by kainate was insensitive to extracellular Mg2+, 1 mM Mg2+ potentiated the effect of combining pathological medium with kainate at low concentrations. These results indicate that preserving Mg2+ homeostasis rendered experimental spinal injury more severe. Furthermore, analyzing ventral horn neuron numbers in relation to fictive locomotion expression might provide a first estimate of the minimal size of the functional locomotor network.
2009
163
2
669
682
Margaryan, G.; Mladinic, M.; Mattioli, C.; Nistri, A.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/14953
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