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Published in: Journal of Neuroinflammation 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Research

RAS modulation prevents progressive cognitive impairment after experimental stroke: a randomized, blinded preclinical trial

Authors: Heba A. Ahmed, Tauheed Ishrat, Bindu Pillai, Abdelrahman Y. Fouda, Mohammed A. Sayed, Wael Eldahshan, Jennifer L. Waller, Adviye Ergul, Susan C. Fagan

Published in: Journal of Neuroinflammation | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Background

With the aging population, the prevalence and incidence of cerebrovascular disease will continue to rise, as well as the number of individuals with vascular cognitive impairment/dementia (VCID). No specific FDA-approved treatments for VCID exist. Although clinical evidence supports that angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) prevent cognitive decline in older adults, whether ARBs have a similar effect on VCID after stroke is unknown. Moreover, these agents reduce BP, which is undesirable in the acute stroke period, so we believe that giving C21 in this acute phase or delaying ARB administration would enable us to achieve the neurovascular benefits without the risk of unintended and potentially dangerous, acute BP lowering.

Methods

The aim of our study was to determine the impact of candesartan (ARB) or compound-21 (an angiotensin type 2 receptor––AT2R––agonist) on long-term cognitive function post-stroke, in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs). We hypothesized that AT2R stimulation, either directly with C21, or indirectly by blocking the angiotensin type 1 receptor (AT1R) with candesartan, initiated after stroke, would reduce cognitive impairment. Animals were subjected to a 60-min transient middle cerebral artery occlusion and randomly assigned to either saline/C21 monotherapy, for the full study duration (30 days), or given sequential therapy starting with saline/C21 (7 days) followed by candesartan for the remainder of the study (21 days). Outcome measures included sensorimotor/cognitive-function, amyloid-β determination, and histopathologic analyses.

Results

Treatment with RAS modulators effectively preserved cognitive function, reduced cytotoxicity, and prevented chronic-reactive microgliosis in SHRs, post-stroke. These protective effects were apparent even when treatment was delayed up to 7 days post-stroke and were independent of blood pressure and β-amyloid accumulation.

Conclusion

Collectively, our findings demonstrate that RAS modulators effectively prevent cognitive impairment after stroke, even when treatment is delayed.
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Metadata
Title
RAS modulation prevents progressive cognitive impairment after experimental stroke: a randomized, blinded preclinical trial
Authors
Heba A. Ahmed
Tauheed Ishrat
Bindu Pillai
Abdelrahman Y. Fouda
Mohammed A. Sayed
Wael Eldahshan
Jennifer L. Waller
Adviye Ergul
Susan C. Fagan
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Neuroinflammation / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1742-2094
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-018-1262-x

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