Sakabe T, Nagai I, Ishikawa T, Takeshita H, Masuda T, Matsumoto M, Tateishi A
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 1986 Dec;6(6):684-90. doi: 10.1038/jcbfm.1986.124.
The effects of the calcium entry blocker nicardipine on CBF, CMRO2, and neurologic outcome following 10 min of complete cerebral ischemia were examined in dogs. In CBF and CMRO2 studies, the CBF in the untreated group (seven dogs) and the nicardipine group (seven dogs; 20 micrograms kg-1 at 30 min postischemia and a subsequent infusion of 2 micrograms kg-1 min-1 for 90 min) initially increased to 300-400% and then returned to preischemic values at 30 min postischemia. Thereafter the CBF in the untreated group significantly decreased to 50% of preischemic values for the following 90-min period (hypoperfusion), while the CBF in the nicardipine group did not differ from preischemic values. The CMRO2 in both groups decreased to approximately 50-80% of preischemic values after 15 min postischemia and did not differ between the groups throughout the study. In neurologic outcome studies, 18 dogs were divided into three groups (of six dogs each): untreated; saline infusion only, posttreated; nicardipine as in CBF and CMRO2 studies, pretreated; nicardipine 20 micrograms kg-1 at 2 min preischemia and a subsequent infusion of 2 micrograms kg-1 min-1 from immediately postischemia to 120 min postischemia. Nicardipine treatment initiated either before or after ischemia failed to improve neurologic outcome at 48 h postischemia. Thus, the increase of postischemic global CBF by nicardipine is not accompanied by neurologic recovery in a canine model of complete cerebral ischemia.