Nitric Oxide Reverses Aspirin Antagonism of t-PA Thrombolysis in a Rabbit Model of Thromboembolic Stroke
Autor: | Diantha B. Howard, Martin M. Bednar, G R Thomas, Cordell E. Gross, Sheila R. Russell |
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Rok vydání: | 1997 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_treatment Nitric Oxide Tissue plasminogen activator Nitric oxide chemistry.chemical_compound Bolus (medicine) Developmental Neuroscience Thromboembolism medicine Animals Myocardial infarction Stroke Aspirin business.industry Thrombolysis medicine.disease Antifibrinolytic Agents Cerebrovascular Disorders Neurology chemistry Tissue Plasminogen Activator Anesthesia Female Rabbits business Antagonism medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Experimental Neurology. 146:513-517 |
ISSN: | 0014-4886 |
DOI: | 10.1006/exnr.1997.6568 |
Popis: | Randomized trials of thrombolytic therapy in stroke have reported an improvement in neurologic outcome; however, the addition of aspirin has resulted in a significant increase in mortality and antagonism of clot lysis in clinical and animal studies, respectively. This finding is in contradistinction to the known synergy in mortality reduction for aspirin and thrombolytics in myocardial infarction. It is hypothesized that aspirin antagonism of clot lysis is related to inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) and may be reversed by providing a source of NO. Twenty rabbits were treated with aspirin (20 mg/kg, i.v.) prior to internal carotid clot embolization. One-half hour following embolization, rabbits were randomized to receive vehicle (n = 5), the NO precursor L-arginine (300 mg/kg, i.v. bolus at 0.5 and 2.5 h postembolus; n = 5), or a nitric oxide donor (nitroprusside, 1 mg/kg/h, i.a., or nitroglycerin, 10 microg/kg/min, i.v., n = 5 each agent). Tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) (6.3 mg/kg) was administered from 1 to 3 h after embolization. Lysis of the tin-tagged clot was followed with serial X rays and gross examination. No rabbit in the control group experienced complete clot lysis. However, 2 of 5 rabbits in the L-arginine group and 6 of 10 rabbits in the nitric oxide donor (nitroprusside and nitroglycerin) groups noted complete clot lysis (P < 0.05, Fisher exact test). Thus, administration of an NO donor (nitroglycerin or nitroprusside) and, to a lesser extent L-arginine, reversed aspirin's antagonism of t-PA thrombolysis. This study may help explain the discrepant results seen with aspirin and thrombolytics. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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