Intensive anti-oxidant pretreatment retards motor nerve degeneration.
Journal: 1987/August - Brain Research
ISSN: 0006-8993
PUBMED: 3036315
Abstract:
Intensive pretreatment of cats with a combination of the antioxidants D-alpha-tocopherol (200 IU) and selenium (50 micrograms) once daily for 5 days (p.o.) was found to significantly preserve the functional capacity of degenerating soleus motor nerve terminals (measured at 48 h after axon section at the hip) in the in vivo soleus nerve-muscle preparation. The preservation of function was apparent in terms of: a greater soleus contractile response to nerve stimulation at low frequencies, a more rapid recovery from D-tubocurarine-induced neuromuscular block, and a better maintenance of tetanic contractile tension during high-frequency nerve stimulation. The ability of antioxidants to retard the anterograde axonal degeneration (i.e. 'Wallerian') process suggests that lipid peroxidation may be a fundamental mechanism of neuronal degeneration.
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