Transdermal Glyceryl Trinitrate as an Effective Adjunctive Treatment with Artemether for Late-Stage Experimental Cerebral Malaria

Author:

Orjuela-Sánchez Pamela,Ong Peng Kai,Zanini Graziela M.,Melchior Benoît,Martins Yuri C.,Meays Diana,Frangos John A.,Carvalho Leonardo J. M.

Abstract

ABSTRACTCerebral malaria (CM) is associated with low nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability, cerebrovascular constriction, occlusion, and hypoperfusion. Administration of exogenous NO partially prevents the neurological syndrome and associated vascular pathology in an experimental CM (ECM) mouse model. In this study, we evaluated the effects of transdermal glyceryl trinitrate in preventing ECM and, in combination with artemether, rescuing late-stage ECM mice from mortality. The glyceryl trinitrate and/or artemether effect on survival and clinical recovery was evaluated in C57BL/6 mice infected withP. bergheiANKA. NO synthase (NOS) expression in mouse brain was determined by Western blots. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and pial arteriolar diameter were monitored using a tail-cuff blood pressure system and a cranial window preparation, respectively. Preventative administration of glyceryl trinitrate at 0.025 mg/h decreased ECM mortality from 67 to 11% and downregulated inducible NOS expression in the brain. When administered as adjunctive rescue therapy with artemether, glyceryl trinitrate increased survival from 47 to 79%. The adjunctive therapy caused a sustained reversal of pial arteriolar vasoconstriction in ECM mice, an effect not observed with artemether alone. Glyceryl trinitrate induced a 13% decrease in MAP in uninfected mice but did not further affect MAP in hypotensive ECM mice. Glyceryl trinitrate, when combined with artemether, was an effective adjunctive rescue treatment for ECM. This treatment ameliorated pial arteriolar vasospasm and did not significantly affect MAP. These results indicate that transdermal glyceryl trinitrate has potential to be considered as a candidate for adjunctive therapy for CM.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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