Zaghi Gislene Gonçalves Dias, Godinho Jacqueline, Ferreira Emilene Dias Fiuza, Ribeiro Matheus Henrique Dal Molin, Previdelli Isolde Santos, de Oliveira Rúbia Maria Weffort, Milani Humberto
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Health Science Center, Brazil.
Department of Statistics, Exact Science Center, State University of Maringá, Maringá, Brazil; Federal Institute of Parana, Palmas, Paraná, Brazil.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2016 Feb 4;65:179-87. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2015.10.004. Epub 2015 Oct 17.
Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion (CCH) is a common condition associated with the development and/or worsening of age-related dementia.We previously reported persistent memory loss and neurodegeneration after CCH in middle-aged rats. Statin-mediated neuroprotection has been reported after acute cerebral ischemia. Unknown, however, is whether statins can alleviate the outcome of CCH. The present study investigated whether atorvastatin attenuates the cognitive and neurohistological outcome of CCH. Rats (12–15 months old) were trained in a non-food-rewarded radial maze, and then subjected to CCH. Atorvastatin (10 mg/kg, p.o.) was administered for 42 days or 15 days, beginning 5 h after the first occlusion stage. Retrograde memory performance was assessed at 7, 14, 21, 28, and 35 days of CCH, and expressed by “latency,” “number of reference memory errors” and “number of working memory errors.” Neurodegeneration was then examined at the hippocampus and cerebral cortex. Compared to sham, CCH caused profound and persistent memory loss in the vehicle-treated groups, as indicated by increased latency (91.2% to 107.3%) and number of errors (123.5% to 2508.2%), effects from which the animals did not spontaneously recover across time. This CCH-induced retrograde amnesia was completely prevented by atorvastatin (latency: −4.3% to 3.3%; reference/working errors: −2.5% to 45.7%), regardless of the treatment duration. This effect was sustained during the entire behavioral testing period (5 weeks), even after discontinuing treatment. This robust and sustained memory-protective effect of atorvastatin occurred in the absence of neuronal rescue (39.58% to 56.45% cell loss). We suggest that atorvastatin may be promising for the treatment of cognitive sequelae associated with CCH.
慢性脑灌注不足(CCH)是一种与年龄相关性痴呆的发生和/或恶化相关的常见病症。我们之前报道过中年大鼠在发生CCH后出现持续性记忆丧失和神经退行性变。已有报道称他汀类药物在急性脑缺血后具有神经保护作用。然而,尚不清楚他汀类药物是否能改善CCH的后果。本研究调查了阿托伐他汀是否能减轻CCH的认知和神经组织学后果。将大鼠(12 - 15月龄)在非食物奖励的放射状迷宫中进行训练,然后使其发生CCH。在首次闭塞阶段后5小时开始,给予阿托伐他汀(10mg/kg,口服)42天或15天。在CCH的第7、14、21、28和35天评估逆行记忆表现,并用“潜伏期”、“参考记忆错误数”和“工作记忆错误数”表示。然后检查海马体和大脑皮层的神经退行性变情况。与假手术组相比,在给予赋形剂治疗的组中,CCH导致了严重且持续的记忆丧失,表现为潜伏期增加(91.2%至107.3%)和错误数增加(123.5%至2508.2%),动物不会随着时间自发恢复这些影响。无论治疗持续时间如何,阿托伐他汀都能完全预防这种由CCH诱导的逆行性遗忘(潜伏期:-4.3%至3.3%;参考/工作错误:-2.5%至45.7%)。即使在停止治疗后,这种作用在整个行为测试期(5周)内都持续存在。阿托伐他汀这种强大且持续的记忆保护作用在没有神经元挽救(细胞损失39.58%至56.45%)的情况下发生。我们认为阿托伐他汀在治疗与CCH相关的认知后遗症方面可能具有前景。