There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Although ischemic stroke is a major cause of death worldwide and the predominant cause
of acquired disability, the only effective drug therapy that has been developed thus
far is reperfusion by tissue plasminogen activator. Since most patients do not qualify
for this treatment, new methods have to be developed. It is well known that estradiol
(E2) exerts neuroprotective effects in different models of cerebral ischemia, but
post-stroke treatment after an acute stroke has hardly been investigated. As many
patients with an acute ischemic stroke have arterial hypertension, it is also of interest
to evaluate the influence of this co-morbidity on the treatment efficacy of E2. The
effects of E2 administered 30min after a transient middle cerebral artery occlusion
(tMCAO) induced by an intracerebral injection of endothelin-1 were assessed in male
normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs). Treatment
with E2 reduced infarct size in both WKY and SHRs and decreased the number of degenerating
neurons, indicating that acute treatment with E2 is indeed neuroprotective. To address
the role of glia in neuroprotection, the effects of E2 on the activation of microglia
and astrocytes was determined. It appeared that E2 had no effect on microglial activation,
but reduced the activation of astrocytes in SHRs but not in the normotensive controls.
We conclude that post-stroke E2 treatment in both normotensive and hypertensive rats
is neuroprotective. Although the presence of hypertension changed the astrocytic response
to E2, it did not affect treatment efficacy.