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  • Title: Failure of estradiol to improve spontaneous or rehabilitation-facilitated recovery after hemorrhagic stroke in rats.
    Author: Nguyen AP, Arvanitidis AP, Colbourne F.
    Journal: Brain Res; 2008 Feb 08; 1193():109-19. PubMed ID: 18178174.
    Abstract:
    Estrogen influences not only the incidence of stroke, but also the amount of injury sustained from a stroke including intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). In this study we tested whether delayed 17beta-estradiol (E2) treatment affects recovery following striatal ICH. Female rats were trained and tested on several behavioral tests to assess skilled reaching, spontaneous forelimb usage and walking ability. Two weeks following ovariectomy, rats were subjected to a moderate-sized ICH via infusion of collagenase into the striatum. One week later they were implanted with either an E2 pellet (0.36 mg; 60-day release) or they underwent a sham procedure. They were further divided into groups that received either environmental enrichment (EE) rehabilitation therapy (group housing in a complex cage with ramps, tunnels, etc.) or a control condition (group housing in a standard cage). Rats were then behaviorally evaluated out to 8 weeks post-ICH and then euthanized. Neither EE nor E2 affected lesion size, which averaged 62.8 mm(3) across all groups. The EE therapy improved recovery on some tests (e.g., traversing a horizontal ladder) whereas E2 treatment did not notably affect either spontaneous or EE-facilitated recovery. Thus, E2 fails to improve recovery or protect against brain injury when given after a 1-week delay in contrast to its clear neuroprotective effects when given before or soon after ICH.
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