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Title: Effects of long term nitrite therapy on functional recovery in experimental ischemia model. Author: Jung KH, Chu K, Lee ST, Sunwoo JS, Park DK, Kim JH, Kim S, Lee SK, Kim M, Roh JK. Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun; 2010 Dec 03; 403(1):66-72. PubMed ID: 21040706. Abstract: Our data have shown that nitrite therapy can rescue the ischemic brain when injected <3h after cerebral ischemic-reperfusion (I/R) injury and its effects can be prolonged to 4.5h in combination with memantine. We investigated whether or not long-term nitrite therapy is beneficial in ischemic brains. Sodium nitrite (1-100 μg/kg ip) or saline were administered to rats subjected to focal I/R injury for 7 days beginning 24h after I/R. Behavioral tests for 5 weeks revealed better functional recovery in the high-dose nitrite group than the control group. Other nitrite groups with relatively low doses showed no functional benefits. Hemispheric atrophy was attenuated by approximately 30% in the high-dose nitrite group. High-dose nitrite therapy also reduced inflammatory cytokine levels and caspase activity in the subacute period, and increased BrdU(+)MAP2(+) and BrdU(+)laminin(+) cells, and vascular density in the 5-week ischemic brain. Long-term nitrite therapy, when initiated 24h after I/R, corrected the subacute hostile environment, induced tissue and vascular regeneration, and improved functional recovery. Early and subsequent long term nitrite therapy may be effective in the management for ischemic stroke patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]