Summary
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1.
Rats which survived hypoglycemia by insulin, hypoxia by 10% O2, or ischemia by carotid ligation and hypotension to 40 mm Hg, evidenced no changes in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) uridine. Animals which died soon after the above interventions or as a result of KCl-induced cardiac arrest had elevated CSF uridine concentrations.
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Injection of whole blood or the soluble contents of lysed blood cells into the lateral ventricle of rats reduced CSF uridine to less than one-half normal at 24 hrs but values returned to normal 3 days later. Changes in hypoxanthine resembled those of uridine, but were less dramatic, whereas xanthine concentrations were largely unaltered. Intraventricular injection of plasma or saline did not alter CSF uridine.
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It seems most likely that low CSF uridine concentrations previously reported in head injury patients may be secondary to the effects of blood cell contents in the cerebrospinal fluid, rather than responses to altered metabolism in neurons or glia cells.
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Mueller, R.A., McCown, T.J., Hunt, R.D. et al. Opposite alterations in cerebrospinal fluid uridine after severe cerebral ischemia or intrathecal blood injection. Cell Mol Neurobiol 10, 327–336 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00711178
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00711178