VIGABATRIN-INDUCED LESIONS IN THE RAT-BRAIN DEMONSTRATED BY QUANTITATIVE MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING

被引:48
作者
JACKSON, GD
WILLIAMS, SR
WELLER, RO
VANBRUGGEN, N
PREECE, NE
WILLIAMS, SCR
BUTLER, WH
DUNCAN, JS
机构
[1] INST CHILD HLTH,LONDON,ENGLAND
[2] INST NEUROL,LONDON,ENGLAND
[3] UNIV SOUTHAMPTON,SOUTHAMPTON,HANTS,ENGLAND
[4] UNIV LONDON QUEEN MARY & WESTFIELD COLL,LONDON,ENGLAND
[5] BIBRA,CARSHALTON,SURREY,ENGLAND
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
MRI; VIGABATRIN; PATHOLOGY; T2 RELAXATION TIME;
D O I
10.1016/0920-1211(94)90033-7
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Rats treated with 250 mg/kg/day vigabatrin showed lesions detected by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the cerebellar white matter in vivo. No lesions were seen in any control animal. As well as these visually apparent lesions, quantitative T2 relaxation time measurements showed a 12 ms increase in cerebellar white matter from 66 +/- 4 ms (SD, n = 5) to 78 +/- 2 ms (SD, n = 7). This region, as expected from previous studies, showed microvacuolation on post-mortem pathology. Additionally, significant increases in T2 relaxation times of 4-9 ms were found in the cerebral cortex, thalamus and hippocampus. Microvacuolation was not detected by post-mortem histopathology in the cerebral cortex or hippocampus, however, immunohistochemical staining for glial fibrillary acidic protein and for macrophages (ED1) showed reactive astrocytes (gliosis) and in more severe cases, microglial proliferation in these regions; such changes were also seen in association with the microvacuoles. No T2 increase was found in the cerebellar grey matter or olfactory bulbs. MRI techniques, including T2 relaxometry, are therefore sensitive for detecting vigabatrin-induced changes, including reactive astrocytosis, microglial proliferation and vacuolation in the rat brain. These results suggest that quantitative MRI should be a useful method for evaluating whether vigabatrin has neuropathological effects when given to patients.
引用
收藏
页码:57 / 66
页数:10
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]   MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING OF EXPERIMENTAL CEREBRAL EDEMA [J].
BARNES, D ;
MCDONALD, WI ;
TOFTS, PS ;
JOHNSON, G ;
LANDON, DN .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1986, 49 (12) :1341-1347
[2]   THE CHARACTERIZATION OF EXPERIMENTAL GLIOSIS BY QUANTITATIVE NUCLEAR MAGNETIC-RESONANCE IMAGING [J].
BARNES, D ;
MCDONALD, WI ;
LANDON, DN ;
JOHNSON, G .
BRAIN, 1988, 111 :83-94
[3]   A STUDY OF THE EFFECTS OF VIGABATRIN ON THE CENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEM AND RETINA OF SPRAGUE DAWLEY AND LISTER-HOODED RATS [J].
BUTLER, WH ;
FORD, GP ;
NEWBERNE, JW .
TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY, 1987, 15 (02) :143-148
[4]  
CANNON D J, 1991, Epilepsia, V32, P12
[5]  
CANNON DJ, 1991, J CHILD NEUROL S1, V6
[6]  
CARLTON WW, 1966, AM J PATHOL, V48, P91
[7]   ANISOTROPIC DIFFUSION IN HUMAN WHITE MATTER - DEMONSTRATION WITH MR TECHNIQUES INVIVO [J].
CHENEVERT, TL ;
BRUNBERG, JA ;
PIPE, JG .
RADIOLOGY, 1990, 177 (02) :401-405
[8]   THE EFFECT OF MAGNETIC-SUSCEPTIBILITY VARIATIONS IN NMR IMAGING AND NMR-SPECTROSCOPY INVIVO [J].
COX, IJ ;
BYDDER, GM ;
GADIAN, DG ;
YOUNG, IR ;
PROCTOR, E ;
WILLIAMS, SR ;
HART, I .
JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 1986, 70 (01) :163-168
[9]   CHRONIC TOXICITY STUDIES WITH VIGABATRIN, A GABA-TRANSAMINASE INHIBITOR [J].
GIBSON, JP ;
YARRINGTON, JT ;
LOUDY, DE ;
GERBIG, CG ;
HURST, GH ;
NEWBERNE, JW .
TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY, 1990, 18 (02) :225-238
[10]   ABSENCE OF CORTICAL WHITE MATTER CHANGES IN 3 PATIENTS UNDERGOING LONG-TERM VIGABATRIN THERAPY [J].
HAMMOND, EJ ;
BALLINGER, WE ;
LU, L ;
WILDER, BJ ;
UTHMAN, BM ;
REID, SA .
EPILEPSY RESEARCH, 1992, 12 (03) :261-265