Abstract
Damage resulting from a partial acute lesion of white matter in the central nervous system (CNS) gradually spreads also to neurons that escaped the primary injury, resulting in their degeneration. Such spreading has been referred to as secondary degeneration. In order to demonstrate that this degeneration is indeed secondary to that caused by the acute insult, as well as to investigate the mechanism underlying the spread of damage and ways in which to protect neurons from such damage, we have proposed the use of partial lesion of the rodent optic nerve as a model. In this model we examined whether an antagonist of a receptor-mediated channel, shown to be beneficial in gray matter lesions, can protect neurons from undergoing secondary degeneration following white matter lesion. A well-calibrated partial crush lesion inflicted on the optic nerve of adult rats was immediately followed by a single intraperitoneal injection of the N-methyl-
Key words:
white matter; NMDA receptors; optic nerve lesion; neuroprotection glaucomatous neuropathy
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