Biomedicine

Experimental Drug Helps Reduce Brain Injury

A drug that targets blood vessels in the brain shows promise in animal tests.

  • Wednesday, February 22, 2012
  • By Courtney Humphries

It's estimated that five million people in the U.S. suffer from the long-term effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI)—which can range from coma to loss of movement to cognitive and behavioral problems. A large percentage of soldiers injured in Iraq and Afghanistan have sustained some form of TBI. Scientists have been searching for years for drugs that could ameliorate the effects of these injuries, but so far, none have been shown to prevent damage or speed healing.

Researchers at Wayne State University in Detroit are investigating a drug that they hope could prevent the damage of TBI by improving blood flow to the brain. So far, the drug, called clazosentan, has shown promise in animal tests in improving recovery after a blow to the head.

Christian Kreipke, the lead author of a study describing the tests, says that most experimental TBI treatments have targeted two problems in the injured brain: dangerous swelling of the brain, and structural damage to neurons.

In contrast, his team is trying to prevent a third side effect of injury: a narrowing of blood vessels, which can restrict blood flow to brain tissue. Kreipke says that after an injury, the brain's blood vessels enter a cycle of narrowing and dilating that eventually leads to a condition called vasospasm, in which blood vessels constrict and cut off flow to the brain. Vasospasm is a frequent occurrence in brain injuries, and particularly common in soldiers with TBIs caused by blasts.

Advertisement

In a study published last year in Neurological Research, his team showed that administering the drug 30 minutes after a brain trauma could reduce the amount of injury to brain cells in rats; animals treated with the drug also showed more improvement in a maze test than untreated brain-injured rats. This April at the American Academy of Neurology's annual meeting in New Orleans, the team will present further data showing that the drug can have beneficial effects in rats when administered up to 12 hours after injury, which Kreipke compares to a day after injury in humans. This relatively long window of opportunity could be important, Kreipke says, for injury victims like soldiers who can't access immediate treatment, or patients who don't realize the extent of their injury immediately.

Print

Related Articles

The Mechanics of Blast Injuries

Two studies mimic the effects of traumatic brain injury in cells, helping to explain how explosions harm soldiers' brains.

Veterans in Need

Brain-injury survivors in the U.S. military need far better care.

Brain Trauma in Iraq

Thousands of U.S. soldiers have survived powerful explosions in Iraq. Many are returning home with brain injuries that could result in long-term disabilities.

Advertisement

MAGAZINE

People Power 2.0

How civilians helped win the Libyan information war.

Videos

The Virtual Nurse Will See You Now

More

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement