Impact of Early High-protein Diet on Neurofunctional Recovery in Rats with Ischemic Stroke.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to examine the impact of an early high-protein diet on neurofunctional recovery, cerebral infarct areas, and oxidative stress in rats with ischemic stroke.
Results Summary
The high-protein diet group showed faster weight gain, lower neurological impairment scores, improved motor coordination and balance, smaller cerebral infarct areas, increased SOD expression, and reduced MDA and iNOS expressions compared to the standard-protein diet group. No significant differences were observed between sham groups.
Population
Adult male Sprague Dawley rats (7-8 months old, 250-280 g) with induced ischemic stroke.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Intervention started on the first day post-surgery; duration not explicitly stated.
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
early high-protein diet | increase | weight growth | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | gained faster weight growth | #1 |
early high-protein diet | decrease | neurological impairment scores | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | presented significantly lower neurological impairment scores | #2 |
early high-protein diet | increase | motor coordination and balance ability | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | remarkably improved motor coordination and balance ability | #3 |
early high-protein diet | decrease | cerebral infarct areas | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | showed smaller cerebral infarct areas | #4 |
early high-protein diet | increase | expression of SOD (superoxide dismutase) | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | increased expression of SOD (superoxide dismutase) | #5 |
early high-protein diet | decrease | expressions of MDA (malondialdehyde) | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | reduced expressions of MDA (malondialdehyde) | #6 |
early high-protein diet | decrease | expressions of iNOS (inducible nitric oxide synthase) | rats with ischemic stroke (MCAO model) | - | reduced expressions of iNOS (inducible nitric oxide synthase) | #7 |
high-protein diet | no change | body weights, neurological functions, cerebral infarct areas, oxidative stress injuries | sham-operated rats | - | no significant difference | #8 |
BACKGROUND Ischemic stroke, featuring high incidence, morbidity, and mortality, is one of the three major diseases troubling human beings. The purpose of the study was to examine the impact of early high-protein diet on neurofunctional recovery in rats with ischemic stroke as well as their cerebral infarct areas and molecular expressions of oxidative stress. MATERIAL AND METHODS The middle cerebral artery occlusion model (MCAO) was established, and 48 adult, male Sprague Dawley (SD) rats of clean grade aged seven to eight months (250-280 g body weight) were randomized into four groups: the MCAO group with high-protein diet (MH), the MCAO group with standard-protein diet (MS), the sham group with high-protein diet (SH), and the sham group with standard-protein diet (SS). High-protein diet intervention started on the first day of the surgery, and the rats' body weights and their neurological deficit scores were measured on each postoperative day while the scores of motors coordination and balance ability were recorded every other day. In addition, their cerebral infant areas and the molecular expressions of oxidative stress injuries were detected as well. RESULTS Compared to the MS group, the rats in the MH group gained faster weight growth (p<0.05), presented significantly lower neurological impairment scores (p<0.05), remarkably improved motor coordination and balance ability (p<0.05) as well as showed smaller cerebral infarct areas (p<0.05), increased expression of SOD (superoxide dismutase), and reduced expressions of MDA (malondialdehyde) and iNOS (inducible nitric oxide synthase). However, there was no significant difference between the SS group and the SH group (p>0.05). CONCLUSIONS Early high-protein diet facilitates the recovery of body weights and neurological functions as well the reduction of the cerebral infarct areas of rats, thus alleviating ischemic stroke-caused oxidative stress injuries.