Aviso: para depositar documentos, por favor, inicia sesión e identifícate con tu cuenta de correo institucional de la UCM con el botón MI CUENTA UCM. No emplees la opción AUTENTICACIÓN CON CONTRASEÑA
 

Iron overload, measured as serum ferritin, increases brain damage induced by focal ischemia and early reperfusion

Citation

García-Yébenes I, Sobrado M, Moraga A, Zarruk JG, Romera VG, Pradillo JM, Perez de la Ossa N, Moro MA, Dávalos A, Lizasoain I. Iron overload, measured as serum ferritin, increases brain damage induced by focal ischemia and early reperfusion. Neurochem Int. 2012 Dec;61(8):1364-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neuint.2012.09.014

Abstract

High levels of iron, measured as serum ferritin, are associated to a worse outcome after stroke. However, it is not known whether ischemic damage might increase ferritin levels as an acute phase protein or whether iron overload affects stroke outcome. The objectives are to study the effect of stroke on serum ferritin and the contribution of iron overload to ischemic damage. Swiss mice were fed with a standard diet or with a diet supplemented with 2.5% carbonyl iron to produce iron overload. Mice were submitted to permanent (by ligature and by in situ thromboembolic models) or transient focal ischemia (by ligature for 1 or 3h). Treatment with iron diet produced an increase in the basal levels of ferritin in all the groups. However, serum ferritin did not change after ischemia. Animals submitted to permanent ischemia had the same infarct volume in the groups studied. However, in mice submitted to transient ischemia followed by early (1h) but not late reperfusion (3h), iron overload increased ischemic damage and haemorrhagic transformation. Iron worsens ischemic damage induced by transient ischemia and early reperfusion. In addition, ferritin is a good indicator of body iron levels but not an acute phase protein after ischemia.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Description

Unesco subjects

Keywords

Collections