Department of Neurology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8730 Alden Drive, Thalians E216, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA.
Brain Res. 2010 Jul 16;1344:217-25. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2010.05.035. Epub 2010 May 19.
Statins have pleiotropic neuroprotective effects in the central nervous system. In this study, we assessed the pharmacological effects of simvastatin on measures of behavior in New Zealand white rabbits embolized using a suspension of small-sized blood clots. For these studies, simvastatin was administered up to 3 hours following embolization, and behavior was measured 48 hours following embolization to calculate the dose of emboli (P(50) in mg) that produces neurological deficits in 50% of the rabbits. A treatment is considered neuroprotective if it significantly increases the P(50) compared to control. Simvastatin treatment (20mg/kg, bolus subcutaneous injection) significantly improved clinical function and increased the P(50) by 143% when administered 1 hour following embolization but was ineffective at 3 hours. In combination studies with the thrombolytic, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) using a standard intravenous dose of 3.3mg/kg (20% bolus, 80% infused), we found that simvastatin could be safely administered with tPA to improve clinical scores; however, the maximum behavioral improvement with the combination treatment was similar to either monotherapy alone, both of which significantly improved behavior (p<0.05). It has been proposed that Simvastatin neuroprotection may be related to a variety of signaling pathways including Rho-kinase (ROCK). To determine if a ROCK mechanism is involved in simvastatin-induced neuroprotection following embolic strokes, we used pharmacological intervention with the ROCK inhibitor, fasudil. When fasudil was administered 30 minutes before simvastatin (given at 1 hour), there was an additional significant (p=0.0217) synergistic increase in behavioral function. However, fasudil as a monotherapy did not affect behavioral function in embolized rabbits. The study suggests that there may be an interaction between simvastatin treatment and the ROCK signaling pathway that should be further explored. Our results suggest that simvastatin treatment may have clinical benefit when used alone or in the presence of tPA, but the therapeutic window using a single-dose regimen is narrow.
他汀类药物在中枢神经系统中具有多效神经保护作用。在这项研究中,我们评估了辛伐他汀对新西兰白兔栓塞模型行为测量的药理学作用。栓塞后 3 小时内给予辛伐他汀,栓塞后 48 小时测量行为,以计算栓塞后产生 50%兔子神经功能缺损的栓塞剂剂量(P(50),以 mg 计)。如果治疗能显著增加 P(50),则认为该治疗具有神经保护作用。栓塞后 1 小时给予辛伐他汀(20mg/kg,皮下推注)可显著改善临床功能,使 P(50)增加 143%,但在 3 小时时无效。在与溶栓剂组织型纤溶酶原激活剂(tPA)联合研究中,使用 3.3mg/kg(20%推注,80%输注)的标准静脉剂量,我们发现辛伐他汀可与 tPA 安全联合应用以改善临床评分;然而,联合治疗的最大行为改善与单药治疗相似,两者均显著改善行为(p<0.05)。有人提出,辛伐他汀的神经保护作用可能与多种信号通路有关,包括 Rho-激酶(ROCK)。为了确定 ROCK 机制是否参与栓塞性中风后辛伐他汀诱导的神经保护,我们使用 ROCK 抑制剂法舒地尔进行了药理干预。当法舒地尔在辛伐他汀(1 小时给予)前 30 分钟给予时,行为功能有显著(p=0.0217)的协同增加。然而,法舒地尔单药治疗不能影响栓塞兔的行为功能。该研究表明,辛伐他汀治疗与 ROCK 信号通路之间可能存在相互作用,需要进一步探索。我们的结果表明,辛伐他汀治疗单独使用或与 tPA 同时使用可能具有临床益处,但单一剂量方案的治疗窗口较窄。