Cerebral malaria pathogenesis involves vascular dysfunction with low nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability, vasoconstriction and impaired vasodilation, leading to ischemia, tissue hypoxia and ultimately death. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) involves NO… Click to show full abstract
Cerebral malaria pathogenesis involves vascular dysfunction with low nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability, vasoconstriction and impaired vasodilation, leading to ischemia, tissue hypoxia and ultimately death. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) involves NO and other pathways, including arachidonic acid (AA)-derived metabolites. Here we show that mice with experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) by P. berghei ANKA showed marked decreases in CBF (as assessed by laser speckle contrast imaging - LSCI) and that administration of L-arginine supplementation (50 mg/kg) and/or of the thromboxane synthase inhibitor Ozagrel (100 mg/kg) induced immediate increases in CBF. L-arginine in combination with artesunate (32 mg/kg) induced immediate reversal of brain ischemia in the short-term (1 hour), but the effect subsided after 3 and 6 hours. Neither L-arginine nor Ozagrel reversed blood brain barrier breakdown. Mice with ECM showed brain levels of selected AA-derived metabolites with a vasoconstrictor profile, with increased levels of 8-isoprostanes, 20-HETE and 14,15-DHET, whereas mice infected with a non-ECM-inducing strain of P. berghei (NK65) showed a vasodilator profile, with normal levels of 20-HETE and 14,15-DHET and increased levels of PGE2. L-arginine is capable of partially reversing cerebral ischemia and AA metabolites may play a role in the cerebrovascular dysfunction in ECM.
               
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