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Dive into the research topics where Dale A. Pelligrino is active.

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Featured researches published by Dale A. Pelligrino.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 1994

Nitric Oxide Synthase Inhibition and Cerebrovascular Regulation

Costantino Iadecola; Dale A. Pelligrino; Michael A. Moskowitz; N. A. Lassen

There is increasing evidence that nitric oxide (NO) is an important molecular messenger involved in a wide variety of biological processes. Recent data suggest that NO is also involved in the regulation of the cerebral circulation. Thus, NO participants in the maintenance of resting cerebrovascular tone and may play an important role in selected vasodilator responses of the cerebral circulation. Furthermore, evidence has been presented suggesting that NO participates in the mechanisms of cerebral ischemic damage. Despite the widespread attention that NO has captured in recent years and the large number of studies that have been published on the subject, there is considerable controversy regarding the role of this agent in cerebrovascular regulation and in ischemic damage. In this paper the results of investigations on NO and the cerebral circulation are reviewed and the evidence for and against a role of NO is critically examined.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 1999

Nitric oxide mediates cerebral ischemic tolerance in a neonatal rat model of hypoxic preconditioning.

Jeffrey M. Gidday; Aarti R. Shah; Raymond G. Maceren; Qiong Wang; Dale A. Pelligrino; David M. Holtzman; T. S. Park

Neuroprotection against cerebral ischemia can be realized if the brain is preconditioned by previous exposure to a brief period of sublethal ischemia. The present study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that nitric oxide (NO) produced from the neuronal isoform of NO synthase (NOS) serves as a necessary signal for establishing an ischemia-tolerant state in brain. A newborn rat model of hypoxic preconditioning was used, wherein exposure to sublethal hypoxia (8% oxygen) for 3 hours renders postnatal day (PND) 6 animals completely resistant to a cerebral hypoxic-ischemic insult imposed 24 hours later. Postnatal day 6 animals were treated 0.5 hour before preconditioning hypoxia with the nonselective NOS inhibitor L-nitroarginine (2 mg/kg intraperitoneally). This treatment, which resulted in a 67 to 81% inhibition of calcium-dependent constitutive NOS activity 0.5 to 3.5 hours after its administration, completely blocked preconditioning-induced protection. However, administration of the neuronal NOS inhibitor 7-nitroindazole (40 mg/kg intraperitoneally) before preconditioning hypoxia, which decreased constitutive brain NOS activity by 58 to 81%, was without effect on preconditioning-induced cerebroprotection, as was pretreatment with the inducible NOS inhibitor aminoguanidine (400 mg/kg intraperitoneally). The protective effects of preconditioning were also not blocked by treating animals with competitive [3-(2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)propyl-1-phosphonate; 5 mg/kg intraperitoneally] or noncompetitive (MK-801; 1 mg/kg intraperitoneally) N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists prior to preconditioning hypoxia. These findings indicate that NO production and activity are critical to the induction of ischemic tolerance in this model. However, the results argue against the involvement of the neuronal NOS isoform, activated secondary to a hypoxia-induced stimulation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, and against the involvement of the inducible NOS isoform, but rather suggest that NO produced by the endothelial NOS isoform is required to mediate this profound protective effect.


Stroke | 2002

Simvastatin Increases Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase and Ameliorates Cerebral Vasospasm Resulting From Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Matthew J. McGirt; John R. Lynch; Augusto Parra; Huaxin Sheng; Robert D. Pearlstein; Daniel T. Laskowitz; Dale A. Pelligrino; David S. Warner

Background and Purpose— Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity is decreased after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Simvastatin increases eNOS activity. We hypothesized that simvastatin would increase eNOS protein and ameliorate SAH-induced cerebral vasospasm. Methods— Mice were treated with subcutaneous simvastatin or vehicle for 14 days and then subjected to endovascular perforation of the right anterior cerebral artery or sham surgery. Three days later, neurological deficits were scored (5 to 27; 27=normal), and middle cerebral artery diameter and eNOS protein were measured. The study was repeated, but simvastatin treatment was started after SAH or sham surgery. Results— In SAH mice, simvastatin pretreatment increased middle cerebral artery diameter (SAH-simvastatin=74±22 &mgr;m, SAH-vehicle=52±18 &mgr;m, P =0.03; sham-simvastatin=102±8 &mgr;m, sham-vehicle=105±6 &mgr;m). Pretreatment reduced neurological deficits (SAH-simvastatin=25±2, SAH-vehicle=20±2, P =0.005; sham-simvastatin and sham-vehicle=27±0). Simvastatin pretreatment also increased eNOS protein. Simvastatin posttreatment caused a modest increase in middle cerebral artery diameter in SAH mice (SAH-simvastatin=56±12 &mgr;m, SAH-vehicle=45±4 &mgr;m, P =0.03; sham-simvastatin=92±13 &mgr;m, sham-vehicle=99±10 &mgr;m) and reduced neurological deficits (SAH-simvastatin=21±1, SAH-vehicle=19±2, P =0.009). Simvastatin posttreatment did not significantly increase eNOS protein. Conclusions— Simvastatin treatment before or after SAH attenuated cerebral vasospasm and neurological deficits in mice. The mechanism may be attributable in part to eNOS upregulation.


Stroke | 1999

Estrogen Provides Neuroprotection in Transient Forebrain Ischemia Through Perfusion-Independent Mechanisms in Rats

Qiong Wang; Roberto A. Santizo; Verna L. Baughman; Dale A. Pelligrino

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Estrogen-related neuroprotection in association with animal models of transient forebrain and focal ischemia has been documented in several recent reports. Some of those studies indicated that part of that benefit was a function of improved intraischemic vasodilating capacity. In the present study we examined whether chronic estrogen depletion and repletion affected ischemic neuropathology through perfusion-independent mechanisms. METHODS Normal, ovariectomized (OVX), and OVX female rats treated with 17beta-estradiol (E2) were subjected to 30 minutes of transient forebrain ischemia (right common carotid occlusion plus hemorrhagic hypotension) and reperfusion. Neurological function and brain histopathology were assessed over the 72-hour recovery period. In all rats, preischemic and intraischemic cortical cerebral blood flow (CBF) levels were monitored with laser-Doppler flowmetry. In additional rats, CBF changes in the striatum and hippocampus were also monitored with laser-Doppler flowmetry probes and radiolabeled microspheres. In each experiment, the level of ischemia was targeted to a 75% to 80% reduction in cortical CBF. RESULTS The similarity in ischemic severity among groups was supported by measurements of comparable patterns of electroencephalographic power changes during the ischemic period. Compared with normal females, OVX rats showed diminished neurological outcomes and more severe histopathology in the hippocampus and striatum. Two-week treatment of OVX rats with E2 was accompanied by postischemic neuropathological changes similar to those seen in normal females. Intraischemic CBF reductions in the hippocampus and striatum were similar in all groups (to 35% to 50% of the preischemic value) but significantly less than the cortical CBF reductions. CONCLUSIONS These findings indicate that estrogen provides ischemic neuroprotection through mechanisms unrelated to improvement of intraischemic cerebral perfusion.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 1995

The role of neuronal nitric oxide synthase in regulation of cerebral blood flow in normocapnia and hypercapnia in rats

Qiong Wang; Dale A. Pelligrino; Verna L. Baughman; Heidi M. Koenig; Ronald F. Albrecht

The nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitors, nitro-L-arginine, its methyl ester, and N-monomethyl-L-arginine, have been shown to attenuate resting CBF and hypercapnia-induced cerebrovasodilation. Those agents nonspecifically inhibit the endothelial and neuronal NOS (eNOS and nNOS). In the present study, we used a novel nNOS inhibitor, 7-nitroindazole (7-NI) to examine the role of nNOS in CBF during normocapnia and hypercapnia in fentanyl/N2O-anesthetized rats. CBF was monitored using laser-Doppler flowmetry. Administration of 7-NI (80 mg kg−1 i.p.) reduced cortical brain NOS activity by 57%, the resting CBF by 19–27%, and the CBF response to hypercapnia by 60%. The 60% reduction was similar in magnitude to the CBF reductions observed in previous studies in which nonspecific NOS inhibitors were used. In the present study, 7-NI did not increase the MABP. Furthermore, the CBF response to oxotremorine, a blood–brain barrier permeant muscarinic agonist that induces cerebrovasodilation via endothelium-derived NO, was unaffected by 7-NI. These results confirmed that 7-NI does not influence eNOS; they also indicated that the effects of 7-NI on the resting CBF and on the CBF response to hypercapnia in this study were solely related to its inhibitory action on nNOS. The results further suggest that the NO synthesized by the action of nNOS participates in regulation of basal CBF and is the major, if not the only, category of NO contributing to the hypercapnic CBF response.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2010

Cerebral Blood Flow Response to Functional Activation

Olaf B. Paulson; Steen G. Hasselbalch; Egill Rostrup; Gitte M. Knudsen; Dale A. Pelligrino

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral metabolic rate are normally coupled, that is an increase in metabolic demand will lead to an increase in flow. However, during functional activation, CBF and glucose metabolism remain coupled as they increase in proportion, whereas oxygen metabolism only increases to a minor degree—the so-called uncoupling of CBF and oxidative metabolism. Several studies have dealt with these issues, and theories have been forwarded regarding the underlying mechanisms. Some reports have speculated about the existence of a potentially deficient oxygen supply to the tissue most distant from the capillaries, whereas other studies point to a shift toward a higher degree of non-oxidative glucose consumption during activation. In this review, we argue that the key mechanism responsible for the regional CBF (rCBF) increase during functional activation is a tight coupling between rCBF and glucose metabolism. We assert that uncoupling of rCBF and oxidative metabolism is a consequence of a less pronounced increase in oxygen consumption. On the basis of earlier studies, we take into consideration the functional recruitment of capillaries and attempt to accommodate the cerebral tissues increased demand for glucose supply during neural activation with recent evidence supporting a key function for astrocytes in rCBF regulation.


Neuroreport | 1998

Cerebral vasodilating capacity during forebrain ischemia: effects of chronic estrogen depletion and repletion and the role of neuronal nitric oxide synthase.

Dale A. Pelligrino; Roberto A. Santizo; Verna L. Baughman; Qiong Wang

THE effects of chronic 17β-estradiol (E2) depletion, via ovariectomy (OVX), and its repletion, on cortical cerebral blood flow (CBF) and EEG activities during forebrain ischemia, as well as post-ischemic recovery and neuropathology, were assessed and compared with results obtained in normal female rats. We also examined whether neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) activity is affected by OVX and E2 replacement and whether NOS-derived NO supports vasodilation during ischemia. OVX females displayed a significantly lower CBF during ischemia (10% of baseline) than did normal females (23% of baseline). In OVX rats, given chronic low-dose E2 treatment (0.1 mg kg−1 day−1), intra-ischemic CBF was similar to normal females (25% of baseline). However, at supraphysiologic E2 doses (≥ 0.5 mg kg−1 day−1), that benefit was diminished or lost. Intra-ischemic EEG power reductions and post-ischemic survival rates, neurological dysfunction, and histopathology displayed similar relative differences among groups as the CBF findings. Intra-ischemic CBF was reduced by nNOS inhibition, with ARL 17477, in normal and low-dose E2-treated OVX rats (4–8% baseline). The repressed intra-ischemic vasodilating function in OVX rats may be due to reductions in nNOS activity, because untreated OVX rats showed a 50% lower cortical nNOS activity than that in normal rats and in rats treated with low or high dose (5 mg kg−1 day−1) E2. However, the inability to restore vasodilating function despite normalization of nNOS activity indicates that another mechanism is responsible for the repression of vasodilatory function in the high-dose group. These findings suggest that E2, at levels within the physiological range, promotes ischemic neuroprotection via improving vasodilating capacity. One possible mechanism may relate to E2 enhancing brain nNOS expression and activity.


Anesthesiology | 1992

Ketamine Decreases Plasma Catecholamines and Improves Outcome from Incomplete Cerebral Ischemia in Rats

William E. Hoffman; Dale A. Pelligrino; Christian Werner; Eberhard Kochs; R. F. Albrecht; Jochem Schulte am Esch

Central neuroexcitatory receptors (N-methyl-D-aspartate [NMDA], non-NMDA) may affect outcome from cerebral ischemia by altering sympathetic nervous system activity. We tested whether ketamine, an NMDA antagonist, and NBQX, a non-NMDA antagonist, improve outcome from incomplete cerebral ischemia in the rat and whether a change in outcome is related to changes in plasma catecholamines. There were five treatment groups: group 1 (control, n = 10) received a fentanyl infusion at a rate of 25 microgram.kg-1.h-1 and ventilation with 70% N2O in O2. Group 2 (n = 10) received the same anesthetic treatment and were given an intraperitoneal injection of 30 mg/kg NBQX 15 min prior to ischemia. Group 3 (n = 10) received a ketamine infusion of 1.0 mg.kg-1.min-1 and ventilation with room air. Group 4 (n = 10) received a ketamine infusion of 1.5 mg.kg-1.min-1. Group 5 received a ketamine infusion of 1 mg.kg-1.min-1 plus a 6 ml/kg intraperitoneal injection of 40% glucose solution 15 min before the start of ischemia. Ischemia was produced by right common carotid ligation combined with hemorrhagic hypotension to 35 mmHg for 30 min. Blood gases, pH, and skull temperature were controlled during ischemia. Plasma glucose increased during ischemia in all groups but was lower in ketamine-anesthetized rats (groups 3 and 4). Glucose-loaded ketamine-anesthetized rats (group 5) had plasma glucose concentrations similar to the control group. Plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations were significantly less in ketamine-anesthetized rats (groups 3, 4, and 5) during ischemia compared to controls (P less than 0.05). Neurologic outcome was significantly better (P less than 0.05) in all ketamine-treated rats (groups 3, 4, and 5) compared to the control group, regardless of plasma glucose concentration during ischemia. NBQX did not improve neurologic outcome. These results suggest that ketamine improves neurologic outcome from incomplete cerebral ischemia by a mechanism related to a decrease in plasma catecholamine activity.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2014

Neurogenesis and Inflammation after Ischemic Stroke: What is Known and Where We Go from Here

Matthew K. Tobin; Jacqueline A. Bonds; Richard D. Minshall; Dale A. Pelligrino; Fernando D. Testai; Orly Lazarov

This review covers the pathogenesis of ischemic stroke and future directions regarding therapeutic options after injury. Ischemic stroke is a devastating disease process affecting millions of people worldwide every year. The mechanisms underlying the pathophysiology of stroke are not fully understood but there is increasing evidence demonstrating the contribution of inflammation to the drastic changes after cerebral ischemia. This inflammation not only immediately affects the infarcted tissue but also causes long-term damage in the ischemic penumbra. Furthermore, the interaction between inflammation and subsequent neurogenesis is not well understood but the close relationship between these two processes has garnered significant interest in the last decade or so. Current approved therapy for stroke involving pharmacological thrombolysis is limited in its efficacy and new treatment strategies need to be investigated. Research aimed at new therapies is largely about transplantation of neural stem cells and using endogenous progenitor cells to promote brain repair. By understanding the interaction between inflammation and neurogenesis, new potential therapies could be developed to further establish brain repair mechanisms.


Stroke | 2000

Effects of Estrogen on Leukocyte Adhesion After Transient Forebrain Ischemia

Roberto A. Santizo; Susan Anderson; Shuhua Ye; Heidi M. Koenig; Dale A. Pelligrino

Background and Purpose Recent findings indicate that estrogen (ie, 17&bgr;-estradiol [E2]) provides neuroprotection in models of transient global and focal ischemia. Enhanced postischemic leukocyte adhesion and infiltration have been linked to neuropathology in the brain as well as other tissues. We recently showed that estrogen reduces leukocyte adhesion in the cerebral circulation of female rats during resting conditions. Methods We compared leukocyte adhesion in pial venules in vivo in intact, ovariectomized (OVX), and E2-treated OVX female rats subjected to transient forebrain ischemia (30-minute right common carotid artery occlusion and hemorrhagic hypotension) and reperfusion. Adherent rhodamine-6G–labeled leukocytes were viewed through a closed cranial window with the use of intravital microscopy. Leukocyte adhesion was measured before ischemia and at different times after reperfusion. Results Before ischemia, leukocyte adhesion (measured as a percentage of venular area occupied by adherent leukocytes) was 2 to 3 times greater in OVX versus intact or E2-treated OVX rats (7.0%, 3.4%, and 2.2%, respectively). This difference disappeared at 120 minutes of reperfusion, when comparable levels of enhanced leukocyte adhesion were observed in all groups. In OVX rats, leukocyte adhesion remained elevated after 4 and 6 hours of reperfusion (11.6% and 12.9%, respectively), while the other 2 groups showed significantly lower levels (5.0% and 5.8% for intact rats and 7.0% and 7.2% for E2-treated OVX rats). Conclusions Present results demonstrate that estrogen modulates leukocyte adhesion in the cerebral circulation after transient forebrain ischemia. This effect suggests that decreased leukocyte adhesion may be an important mechanism in estrogen-mediated neuroprotection.

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Verna L. Baughman

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Heidi M. Koenig

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Ronald F. Albrecht

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Haoliang Xu

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Roberto A. Santizo

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Hao Liang Xu

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Qiong Wang

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Chanannait Paisansathan

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Douglas L. Feinstein

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Francesco Vetri

University of Illinois at Chicago

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