JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, NON-P.H.S.
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A new antioxidant compound H-290/51 attenuates nanoparticle induced neurotoxicity and enhances neurorepair in hyperthermia.

Previous reports from our laboratory show that animals treated with engineered nanoparticles derived from metals for 1 week and subjected to hyperthermia showed enhanced neurotoxicity in terms of blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption, brain edema formation and cell injury. It appears that nanoparticle induced enhanced oxidative stress leads to increased lipid peroxidation and over-production of hydroxyl radicals are responsible for exacerbation of neurotoxicity in hyperthermia. Therefore, in this investigation, rats (after 1 week administration of Ag or Cu nanoparticles) were treated with a new antioxidant compound H-290/51 (an inhibitor of lipid peroxidation, 50 mg/kg, p.o.) before subjecting them to hyperthermia. One group of nanoparticle treated rat received H-290/51 and were kept at room temperature for comparison. Our results show that H-290/51 significantly attenuated heat stress induced BBB impairment, brain edema formation and neurotoxicity in nanoparticle treated rats. However, no significant diminution of nanoparticle induced BBB breakdown, or neurotoxicity was observed in H-290/51 treated rats kept at room temperature. These observations suggest that nanoparticles aggravate oxidative stress following hyperthermia leading to exacerbation of neurotoxicity through oxidative stress-related mechanisms, not reported earlier.

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