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Member
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Maryland outside WASH DC
Posts: 258
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Maryland outside WASH DC
Posts: 258
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Lipoic acid reduces glutamate neuronal damage
-lipoic acid reduces glutamate neuronal damage
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I take some R-Dihydro-Lipoic Acid 150 mg because it lower MMP-9s (stage 1 of MS) and now I know that it helps in Stage 2 of MS by lowering Glutamate neuron damage.
jackD
P.S. If anyone knows of other "thingies" that lower/counters Glutamate excitotoxic neuronal damage please fell free to add it to this thread.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 1995 Jul;15(4):624-30.
Prolonged pretreatment with alpha-lipoic acid protects cultured neurons against hypoxic, glutamate-, or iron-induced injury.
Müller U, Krieglstein J.
Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Philipps-Universität, Marburg, Germany.
Abstract
The antioxidant dihydrolipoic acid has been shown to reduce hypoxic and excitotoxic neuronal damage in vitro. In the present study, we tested whether pretreatment with alpha-lipoic acid, which presumably allows endogenous formation of dihydrolipoic acid, can protect cultured neurons against injury caused by cyanide, glutamate, or iron ions, using the trypan blue exclusion method to determine neuronal damage.
One hour of preincubation with dihydrolipoic acid (1 microM), but not with alpha-lipoic acid, reduced damage of neurons from chick embryo telencephalon caused by 1 mM sodium cyanide or iron ions. alpha-Lipoic acid (1 microM) reduced cyanide-induced neuronal damage when added 24 h before hypoxia, and pretreatment with alpha-lipoic acid for > 24 h enhanced this neuroprotective effect.
Both the R- and the S-enantiomer of alpha-lipoic acid exerted a similar neuroprotective effect. Pretreatment with alpha-lipoic acid (1 microM) from the day of plating onward prevented the degeneration of chick embryo telencephalic neurons that had been exposed to Fe2+/Fe3+. alpha-Lipoic acid (1 microM) added to the culture medium the day of plating also reduced neuronal injury induced by 1 mM L-glutamate in rat hippocampal cultures, whereas 30 min of preincubation with alpha-lipoic acid failed to attenuate glutamate-induced neuronal damage.
Our results indicate that neuroprotection by prolonged pretreatment with alpha-lipoic acid is probably due to the radical scavenger properties of endogenously formed dihydrolipoic acid.
PMID: 7790411 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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