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Dive into the research topics where Fred E. Samson is active.

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Featured researches published by Fred E. Samson.


Neurochemistry International | 1995

Temporalspatial patterns of expression of metallothionein-I and -III and other stress related genes in rat brain after kainic acid-induced seizures.

T. Dalton; T.L. Pazdernik; J. Wagner; Fred E. Samson; G.K. Andrews

Kainic acid-induced seizures in the rat brain cause severe brain damage that is thought to result, in part, from oxidative stress. In this study, we examine the consequences of systemic administration of kainic acid on expression of several genes that encode proteins thought to play roles in protection from oxidative stress, including metallothionein-I, and -III. Kainic acid causes an increase in metallothionein-I and heme oxygenase-I mRNAs, as well as an increase in c-fos, heat shock protein-70, and interleukin-1 beta mRNAs. The induction of these mRNAs is seizure dependent, and is greater in brain areas with extensive damage (e.g. piriform cortex) than in areas with minimal damage (e.g. frontal cortex and cerebellum). In contrast, little or no change in mRNA for metallothionein-III, manganese superoxide dismutase, copper-zinc superoxide dismutase, glutathione-s-transferase ya subunit or glutathione peroxidase occur. The prolonged and robust concordant induction of the metallothionein-I and heme oxygenase-I genes may reflect the oxidative stress produced by kainic acid-induced seizures. In addition, the induction of interleukin-1 beta gene expression suggests an inflammatory response in brain regions damaged by kainic acid-induced seizures. Delineating the regulation of genes associated with oxidative and inflammatory responses can contribute to a fuller understanding of seizures and associated brain damage.


Neuroscience | 1985

Changes in local cerebral glucose utilization induced by convulsants

Thomas L. Pazdernik; Robert S. Cross; M. Giesler; Fred E. Samson; S.R. NelsonP

With the six convulsants studied (Soman, intrahippocampal penicillin, bicuculline, pentylenetetrazol, picrotoxin and strychnine), the anatomical distribution of changes in local cerebral glucose utilization was related to the type of seizure observed. Strychnine induced a few very intense motor convulsions during the 2-deoxyglucose experimental period without having a major effect on brain local cerebral glucose utilization, in support of the view that its actions are predominantly in the spinal cord. Pentylenetetrazol and picrotoxin induced intermittent intense seizures and marked increases in local cerebral glucose utilization in the globus pallidus and substantia nigra. Soman, intrahippocampal penicillin and bicuculline all induced persistent status epilepticus associated with increases in local cerebral glucose utilization in many brain areas; those with striking increases in glucose use include: cortical areas, the limbic system, basal ganglia and substantia nigra. The glucose use changes produced by Soman, penicillin and bicuculline greatly exceeded those induced by pentylenetetrazol and picrotoxin. Activation of the substantia nigra and basal ganglia occurred with all centrally mediated convulsions and with status epilepticus there was also marked activation of cortical and limbic structures.


Anesthesiology | 1980

Ketamine-induced Changes in Regional Glucose Utilization in the Rat Brain

Stanley R. Nelson; Randy B. Howard; Robert S. Cross; Fred E. Samson

Ketamine appears to induce both excitatory and depressant actions in the brain; however, it is not clear which regions are affected. The 2-deoxyglucose functional mapping method of Sokoloff et al. was used to determine regional variations in metabolic activity of rat brain caused by injection of ketamine, 25-75 mg, intramuscularly. To compare the effects of ketamine with those of hippocampal-induced seizures, the 2-deoxyglucose method was used, following injection of penicillin G, 400-800 units, into the hippocampus. The findings from five control, seven ketamine-treated, and three penicillin G-treated rats are given. Ketamine caused a significant increase of metabolic activity in the hippocampal sulci and a decrease of activity in the medial geniculate and the inferior colliculus. Similar changes were found with hippocampal seizures caused by penicillin. The inhibition of the regions associated with sensory systems (medial geniculate and inferior colliculus) may account in part for the anesthetic action of ketamine, while the intense activity of the hippocampus may be related to the excitatory manifestations. The results indicate that ketamine produces seizures in the hippocampus, which in turn inhibit auditory and visually associated nuclei. Thus, the anesthesia may follow from the sensory depression and the cataleptic phenomena may be related to the hippocampal excitation.


Brain Research | 1999

Hypoxia preconditioning attenuates brain edema associated with kainic acid-induced status epilepticus in rats.

Mitchell R. Emerson; Stanley R. Nelson; Fred E. Samson; Thomas L. Pazdernik

Kainic acid (KA)-induced seizures elicit edema associated with necrosis in susceptible brain regions (e.g., piriform cortex and hippocampal CA1 and CA3 regions). To test the hypothesis that hypoxia preconditioning protects against KA-induced edema formation, adult male rats were exposed to a 9% O2, 91% N2 atmosphere for 8 h. KA (14 mg/kg, i.p.) was administered 1, 3, 7, or 14 days later. Regional analysis of edema indicated that hypoxia exposure attenuated edema formation in piriform and frontal cortices and hippocampus when KA was given 1, 3, or 7 days later but not 14 days after hypoxia. Cycloheximide (2 mg/kg s.c.) given 1 h prior to hypoxia prevented the protective effect of hypoxia on KA-induced edema attenuation in the piriform cortex and hippocampus. Thus, hypoxic challenge induces a general adaptive response that protects against the seizure-associated pathophysiology, with no direct relationship to seizure intensity. This response may involve stress-related transcription factors and effector proteins.


Toxicological Sciences | 1984

Soman induced changes in brain regional glucose use

Fred E. Samson; Thomas L. Pazdernik; Robert S. Cross; Mary P. Giesler; Klaus Mewes; Stanley R. Nelson; McDonough Jh

Soman, a potent central acetylcholine esterase inhibitor, has a greater impact on brain regional glucose use than other organophosphates, such as diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) or phospholinium iodide. At near-lethal doses soman induced explosive persistent seizures that were associated with a greater than fourfold increase of glucose use in many brain structures. Single near-lethal doses of soman lead to conspicuous neuronal damage and a marked reduction in brain activity, 1 to 3 days after exposure. When soman (2 X LD50) was given to TAB (an antidotal mixture of trimedoxime, atropine, and benactyzine ) pretreated rats, there was a greater than twofold reduction of glucose use in almost every brain region. We suggest that soman seizures are mediated via activation of muscarinic receptors; also, the substantia nigra has a key role in the initiation/propagation of seizures. Soman has in addition, a depressive effect on some brain components which appears not to involve muscarinic receptors. We suggest that the conspicuous pathology that follows a single, near-lethal dose of soman results from a depletion of energy flow along with an influx of Ca2+ which sets into motion a cascade of destructive reactions, such as activation of proteases.


Neuroscience | 1984

Topographical distribution of down-regulated muscarinic receptors in rat brains after repeated exposure to diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate

L. Churchill; Thomas L. Pazdernik; Fred E. Samson; Stan R. Nelson

Quantitative receptor autoradiography demonstrated that muscarinic receptors were down-regulated in Wistar rats after repeated exposure to diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate. The density of receptors was decreased to 60-85% of the controls. Reductions in muscarinic receptor binding were observed in cortex, caudate-putamen, lateral septum, hippocampal formation, superior colliculus, and pons. The density of muscarinic receptors was unchanged in thalamic and hypothalamic nuclei, periaqueductal grey, cerebellum, inferior colliculus and reticular formation of the brain stem. The down-regulation of muscarinic receptors in forebrain structures, such as cortex, caudate-putamen and hippocampus, may be important in the adaptation to the behavioral effects of organophosphate poisons.


Neurochemical Research | 1992

The osmotic/calcium stress theory of brain damage: Are free radicals involved?

Thomas L. Pazdernik; Matthew E. Layton; Stanley R. Nelson; Fred E. Samson

This overview presents data showing that glucose use increases and that excitatory amino acids (i.e., glutamate, aspartate), taurine and ascorbate increase in the extracellular fluid during seizures. During the cellular hyperactive state taurine appears to serve as an osmoregulator and ascorbate may serve as either an antioxidant or as a pro-oxidant. Finally, a unifying hypothesis is given for seizure-induced brain damage. This unifying hypothesis states that during seizures there is a release of excitatory amino acids which act on glutamatergic receptors, increasing neuronal activity and thereby increasing glucose use. This hyperactivity of cells causes an influx, of calcium (i.e. calcium stress) and water movements (i.e., osmotic stress) into the cells that culminate in brain damage mediated by reactive oxygen species.


Anesthesiology | 1982

The Influence of Droperidol, Diazepam, and Physostigmine on Ketamine-induced Behavior and Brain Regional Glucose Utilization in Rat

Katsuji Oguchi; Kasumi Arakawa; Stanley R. Nelson; Fred E. Samson

Diazepam and droperidol are used clinically with ketamine anes-thesia to reduce emergence hallucinations, vivid unpleasant dreams, and hyperexcitability. Also, there are reports that the recovery time from ketamine anesthesia is shortened after administration of physostigmine. The authors investigated the influence of diazepam, droperidol, and physostigmine pretreatment on ketamine anesthesia by measuring the brain regional activity and behavioral responses in rat. The 2-deoxyglucose brain local metabolic mapping method was used to determine regional brain functional activity. The recovery of tail flick response and righting reflex from ketamine anesthesia were prolonged by diazepam and by droperidol pretreatment, but the duration of agitation was shortened; physostigmine caused no significant change in any of these responses. Ketamine alone caused a statistically significant (P < 0.05) increase in the rate of glucose utilization along the hippocampal molecular layer (control 87 μmol·100 g-1·min-1; ketamine 166 μmol·100 g-1·min-1) and a decrease in medial geniculate (25%), inferior colliculus (37%), and lateral habenula (18%). Diazepam, droperidol, and physostigmine pretreatment did not significantly alter any ketamine-induced glucose use changes, except for a decreased activity in hippocampal molecular layer with diazepam pretreatment (20%) and an increased activity in the lateral habenula with droperidol pretreatment (94%, P < 0.05). These findings corroborate the “epileptogenic” character of ketamine anesthesia and implicate the hippocampus as a major focus. The reduced activity in the hippocampus induced by diazepam pretreatment and the increased activity in the lateral habenula induced by droperidol pretreatment may be factors in the clinical reduction of ketamine hyperexcitability and hallucination by these drugs.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 1988

Soman-induced convulsions affect the inositol lipid signaling system: potentiation by lithium; attenuation by atropine and diazepam.

Kai M. Savolainen; Stanley R. Nelson; Fred E. Samson; Thomas L. Pazdernik

Effects of atropine or diazepam pretreatment on soman-induced convulsions and brain phosphoinositide (PI) metabolism, as assessed by brain regional inositol-1-phosphate (IP1) levels, were studied in saline and LiCl-pretreated rats. IP1, an intermediate in PI turnover, was measured in cortex, caudate, thalamus, hippocampus, and cerebellum. Soman (100 micrograms/kg; sc) produced convulsions in 63% of the saline-pretreated rats, whereas with LiCl pretreatment all rats exposed to 100 micrograms/kg of soman had tonic-clonic convulsions. Thus, LiCl pretreatment potentiated soman-induced convulsions. Tissue IP1 increased severalfold in soman-exposed convulsing rats with the highest increases being in frontal cortex and caudate. In contrast, no marked increases of IP1 occurred in similarly treated nonconvulsing rats. LiCl treatment itself increased IP1 levels without causing convulsions. In LiCl-pretreated rats, soman again markedly elevated IP1 levels above LiCl alone in convulsing rats, whereas no such effect occurred in nonconvulsing rats. In LiCl-pretreated rats, the increased IP1 levels associated with soman-induced convulsions were greatest in hippocampus and piriform cortex. Thus, LiCl appears to lower the threshold for the spread of seizure activity through limbic structures, thereby potentiating cholinergic-induced convulsions. Diazepam and atropine both blocked soman-induced convulsions, and brain regional IP1 elevations were concomitantly abolished as well. These results indicate that soman-induced convulsions involve the inositol lipid signaling system. This involvement is potentiated by lithium but attenuated by atropine and diazepam.


Brain Research Protocols | 1999

A global hypoxia preconditioning model: neuroprotection against seizure-induced specific gravity changes (edema) and brain damage in rats

Mitchell R. Emerson; Stanley R. Nelson; Fred E. Samson; Thomas L. Pazdernik

Hypoxia preconditioning states that a sublethal hypoxia episode will afford neuroprotection against a second challenge in the near future. We describe and discuss a procedure for the development of global hypoxia preconditioning in adult male Wistar rats, using a mildly hypoxic (9% O(2), 91% N(2)) atmospheric exposure of 8 h. The persistence of neuroprotection was analyzed using a kainic acid (KA) model of brain injury. Rats were challenged with KA (14 mg/kg, i.p.) on 1-14 days post-hypoxia. The effects of hypoxia preconditioning on seizure score, weight loss, brain edema and histopathology were assessed. Brain edema, predominantly of vasogenic origin, was measured 24 h after KA administration using a reproducible and quantitative method based on the specific gravities of tissue samples. A density gradient column (1.0250-1.0650 g/cm(3)) comprised of kerosene and bromobenzene was used to assess the presence of edema in regions involved in seizure initiation and propagation that are normally extensively damaged (i.e., piriform cortex and hippocampus). Specific gravities of tissues were calculated through extrapolation with known NaCl standards. We found that hypoxia preconditioning prevented the formation of edema in these brain regions when KA challenge was given 1, 3, and 7, but not 14 days post-hypoxia exposure. Furthermore, neuroprotection was observed in animals that had robust seizures. The described procedure may be used to examine the neuroprotective mechanisms induced by global hypoxia preconditioning against many subsequent challenges reflecting a variety of experimental models of brain injury, and will provide a better understanding of the brain response to hypoxia and stress.

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