Intravenous Administration of Functionalized Magnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Does Not Induce CNS Injury in the Rat: Influence of Spinal Cord Trauma and Cerebrolysin Treatment

Publication date: Available online 3 November 2017 Source:International Review of Neurobiology Author(s): Preeti K. Menon, Aruna Sharma, José V. Lafuente, Dafin F. Muresanu, Zoraida P. Aguilar, Y. Anderw Wang, Ranjana Patnaik, Herbert Mössler, Hari S. Sharma Influence of iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles (IOMNPs, 10nm in diameter, 0.25 or 0.50mg/mL in 100μL, i.v.) on the blood–brain barrier (BBB) permeability, edema formation, and neuronal or glial changes within 4–24h after administration was examined in normal rats and after a focal spinal cord injury (SCI). Furthermore, effect of cerebrolysin, a balanced composition of several neurotrophic factors, and active peptide fragments was also evaluated on IOMNP-induced changes in central nervous system (CNS) pathology. The SCI was inflicted in rats by making a longitudinal incision into the right dorsal horn of the T10–11 segments and allowed to survive 4 or 24h after trauma. Cerebrolysin (2.5mL/kg, i.v.) was given either 30min before IOMNP injection in the 4-h SCI group or 4h after injury in the 24-h survival groups. Control group received cerebrolysin in identical situation following IOMNP administration. In all groups, leakage of serum albumin in the CNS as a marker of BBB breakdown and activation of astrocytes using glial fibrillary acidic protein was evaluated by immunohistochemistry. The neuronal injury was examined by Nissl staining. The IOMNPs alone in either low or high doses did not induce CNS pathol...
Source: International Review of Neurobiology - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research