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. 2007 Jun;205(2):587-90.
doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2007.03.023. Epub 2007 Mar 30.

Heliox and oxygen reduce infarct volume in a rat model of focal ischemia

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Heliox and oxygen reduce infarct volume in a rat model of focal ischemia

Yi Pan et al. Exp Neurol. 2007 Jun.

Abstract

Normobaric hyperoxia treatment has recently been demonstrated to be remarkably beneficial in acute focal ischemia. The present study compared hyperoxia treatment with a novel heliox treatment. Adult male rats breathed 30% oxygen and 70% nitrogen (control group), 100% oxygen (hyperoxia group), or 30% oxygen and 70% helium (heliox group) during a middle cerebral artery occlusion for 2 h and a 1-hour reperfusion (n=6 in each group). Neurological deficits were scored at 3 and 24 h post focal ischemia. Neither the physiological parameters (body temperature, blood pressure, heart rate, O(2) saturation, and laser Doppler cerebral blood) nor the 3-hour post ischemia neurological scores differed between groups. However, the neurological scores showed a statistically significant improvement at 24 h post ischemia in the heliox group (p<0.05). The infarct volume (mean+SD) as measured by 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium staining included 36+/-17% of the involved hemisphere in the control group, 16+/-14% in the hyperoxia group, and 4+/-2% in the heliox group (p<0.01). In conclusion, whereas hyperoxia reduced the infarct volume, heliox further reduced the infarct volume and improved 24-hour neurological deficits in a rat model of focal ischemia. This suggests that a greater benefit may accrue from heliox therapy.

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