Changes of the xanthine and uric acid (UA) levels in rat forebrain following focal cerebral ischemia were studied by reversed-phase HPLC with electrochemical detection. Focal ischemia was induced by occluding the left middle cerebral artery in the rat. The xanthine level in the normal group was 11.50 nmol/g tissue. In the ischemic group, the xanthine concentration in the ischemic hemisphere progressively increased after occlusion and reached a maximum value of 59.42 nmol/g tissue 4 h after operation. The UA level in the normal group was 2.20 nmol/g tissue, whereas in the ischemic group the UA concentration in the ischemic hemisphere gradually increased after occlusion, reaching a value of 38.53 nmol/g tissue 24 h after ischemia. The concentration of UA remained elevated in the ischemic hemisphere until 48 h after occlusion, and reached a maximum value of 38.98 nmol/g tissue. The xanthine and UA levels in the contralateral hemisphere remained unchanged. The xanthine and UA concentrations in the sham-operated group did not show a significant increase after operation. The time course of xanthine and UA levels suggests that in ischemic forebrain UA is formed from xanthine as a product of purine metabolism.
Changes of uric acid level in rat cerebral hemisphere after left middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion were studied by reversed-phase HPLC with electrochemical detection. Uric acid level in the normal group was 2.98 nmol/g tissue. Uric acid concentration of the left hemisphere in the left MCA-occluded group progressively increased after occlusion, and reached a maximum value of 67.26 nmol/g tissue 24 h after ischemia. Uric acid levels in the right hemisphere remained unchanged. Uric acid concentration of the left hemisphere in sham-operated group was 9.29 nmol/g tissue 24 h after the operation.
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