University of Georgia University of Georgia Home
Search
Contact Us
MyUGA
About UGA Admissions Academics Research Public Service and Outreach Student Life Inside UGA Georgia Athletics
When researchers measured brain damage in rats who had a stroke, they found that the rats receiving the blood pressure-lowering drugs fared significantly better.
MISSION Photo IllustrationWhen researchers measured brain damage in rats who had a stroke, they found that the rats receiving the blood pressure-lowering drugs fared significantly better.
 
Building the New Learning Environmentmore...
Maximizing Research Opportunitiesmore...
Competing in a Global Economymore...
 
 
 
 

Surviving a stroke

Visit these Web sites for more information
Complete story
Department of clinical and administrative pharmacy
College of Pharmacy

A new UGA study suggests that commonly prescribed drugs used to lower blood pressure may help reduce brain damage when given within 24 hours of a stroke.

The finding, based on a study using rats and published in the Journal of Hypertension, may ultimately revolutionize emergency stroke care by putting blood pressure-lowering medications alongside clot-busting drugs and blood thinners as front-line medications.

“There is a long-standing controversy about whether you should even treat elevated blood pressure in stroke victims,” said lead author Susan Fagan, UGA College of Pharmacy professor and assistant dean for the Clinical Pharmacy Program at MCG. “We were able to show that lowering blood pressure in the 24 hours following a stroke can reduce brain damage.”

Fagan and her team induced strokes in rats by occluding a major artery in the brain. After three hours, the suture was removed to simulate the effect of thrombolytic, or clot-busting, drugs. The rats were then given one of two common blood pressure lowering drugs or—for the control group—a saline solution.

When researchers measured brain damage, they found that the rats receiving the blood pressure-lowering drugs fared significantly better. While the control group experienced damage in 50 percent of the brain, those receiving the drugs hydralazine and enalapril showed 30 percent damage.

The finding complements a study Fagan and colleagues published last year in the same journal that found similar reductions in brain damage using the common blood pressure drug, candesartan, a popular drug in the class known as angiotensin receptor blockers. The rats given candesartan, however, showed the additional benefit of improved function while the rats receiving the other blood pressure medications had less benefit. Fagan said that in addition to protecting the brain and blood vessels through lowering blood pressure, ARBs appear to block the damaging effects of angiotensin II, a molecule released from the brain and probably other tissues following stroke.

Fagan said the study helps resolve a long-standing debate in medicine regarding whether blood pressure should be lowered immediately following a stroke. Many physicians believe that elevated blood pressure following a stroke is necessary to keep oxygenated blood at the site of the blockage.

Now Fagan is working on a protocol for a human clinical trial to identify which patient characteristics predict a good response to blood pressure-lowering.

“There are probably some patients that can benefit a great deal by having their blood pressure lowered within that first 24 hours after a stroke,” Fagan said. “Our challenge now is identifying those patients.”

The research was funded by grants from the American Heart Association Southeast Affiliate and the National Institutes of Health.

 


Maximizing Research Opportunities

Critical to the success of the research program at UGA is the construction of badly needed facilities in this area of institutional strength. The $40 million Paul D. Coverdell Center for Biomedical Health Sciences, which was completed in 2005, includes two floors of biomedical research laboratories, a state-of-the-art bioimaging research center, a 20,000-square-foot rodent-barrier facility and program offices for BHSI and the College of Public Health. Also, the College of Veterinary Medicine opened the Animal Health Research Center in 2006. AHRC houses scientists who study infectious diseases and toxicity problems that affect human and animal populations. Additionally, the College of Pharmacy’s capital campaign has raised $7 million of the $10 million it committed to build new facilities that will “bridge UGA and Medical College of Georgia,” while the state has promised to fund $36.5 million of the project. The new 140,000-square-foot Complex Carbohydrate Research Center was dedicated in February 2004, and its 900 MHz NMR spectrometer became operational in January 2005.


Office of Vice President for Research and Associate Provost
University of Georgia
609 Boyd Graduate Studies Building
Athens, GA 30602
Phone: 706/542-5969

Previous "Maximizing Research Opportunities" features :

2009-

When breast cancer strikes young
Stopping the flu
Amino acids fight addiction
UGA pumpkin variety grows well for Georgia farmers
Environmental Education Study reveals outdoor awareness
UGA researcher sleuths stink bug’s on-farm travels
Missing monarchs
More vegetables, please!
Algae may help corals survive
Miscanthus: Better Southeast biofuel crop
In support of black bears
The role of Vitamin D
Electrified water packs powerful health punch
Restoring the American chestnut
The heat is on: Setting effective heat-related policies for pre-season sport practices
Big discovery of a tiny animal - a new species of salamander
Fewer twisters
Remains of the day: fossil invertebrates on the Antarctic seafloor
License to invent
Putting a price tag on elections
Finding the missing link: the survival of the Altamaha spinymussel
Deep in the mud
Obesity linked to poor bone health
Testing for Alzheimers
Protecting Preemies
Mountains of change
Rethinking groundwater contamination
Link between unexploded munitions in oceans and cancer-causing toxins determined
Monkeying around
Genome sequence shows sorghum's immense potential
Move to Improve: Exercise in the workplace
Hope that they’re still out there: UGA study may give hope that ivory-billed woodpeckers are still around
UGA research explores little-known chapter in college desegregation
Need for vitamin supplements among Georgia’s elderly
Look! Up in the sky: The discovery of HR 8799

2007 - 2008

Program detering youth alcohol use has side affects
Soybean grant gives researchers tools to unravel better bean
Algae holds promise as biofuel
‘Bumpy’ forecast
Shallow-water corals more resistant to bleaching
Georgia's Fragile Coast: Will Building Green Pay Off?
Study helps clarify role of soil microbes in global warming
Female sex offenders: Most were victims first
Study: Even occasional smoking can impair arteries
Profitable organic farming
UGARF licensing revenues reach record levels
UGA given $4.1 million for bee research
Facebook profiles can be used to detect narcissism
Study in JAMA study links primary care shortage with salary disparities
UGA researcher studying sunflower potential
UGA leads effort to swat down major vegetable disease
A lack of knowledge: HIV testing
Spices may protect against consequences of high blood sugar
UGA technology dramatically increases ethanol yield
‘Red’ and ‘Blue’ Viewers
Camera reveals new organism in Georgia well
Reproducing black flies helps research effort
UGA researchers help papaya take genetic spotlight
Treating post-traumatic stress first helps children overcome grief
Dead Zones: A major breakthrough in determining the effects of nitrogen in whole stream networks
Gene-ius: Using plants to clean up contaminated soils
Borrowers and Lenders: The Journal of Shakespeare and Appropriation
Alien Invasion: the U.S.-China kudzu connection
Building bodies, boosting brains
Saving species: the tiny Georgia plume plant
Side effects may vary: Study finds drug ads misleading
Breaking down barriers: Improving the quality of substance abuse treatment
Making adaptations: Non-traditional breeding strategies

2006-2007

Record trends: Greenland’s ice sheet
The Cancer Vaccine
Don’t drink and drive!: New UGA study on underage drinking
Fight the system: New treatment option for AIDS
The skinny on fat
Surviving a stroke
Love the one you’re with: the Compensation Hypothesis
Mapping genes for fuel
Tracking a killer: Pancreatic cancer
A cancer killer: Pectin kills prostate cancer cells
Modeling dengue fever
Bioenergy: Plant cell walls hold the secret
The high cost of violence
A new, green fuel: biofuel derived from wood chips
Researcher finds way to halve greenhouse water use
Looking beyond the bell: An Analysis of Research on Block Scheduling
Tiny motors: A new method of drug delivery, disease treatment and bioengineering using nanomotors
No need to thank dinosaur-killing asteroid for mammalian success
The end of the world as we know it? Simple interventions that could save tens of thousands of lives
Antibiotic resistance in poultry
How do I love me? A UGA study suggests narcissists see themselves the same on the outside as on the inside
A long distance calling: Migrating monarch butterflies
Tick tock goes the biological clock
Indirect illness: the risk of social workers themselves experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder
The "failed" experiment : How BtBooster was born
Ripple effect: fish spawn new lab
Diagnosis: 60 seconds or less - Surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy
Lucy's Baby: Unearthing the remains of a 3.3 million year old child
You've got mail: Which is more annoying? Spam or direct mail?
Seasonal setbacks: Learning disabilities
Race to save the honey bee
Just the right amount: Variable-rate irrigation
Squashing a bug: Toxoplasma gondii
Black or White?: In the workplace, African Americans may face a more complex situation
Minority buying power
Off label, off base?: The problem with generic drugs

2005-2006
Remember when: Using laboratory rats as animal models to help study memory
Consider the case: A comparative analysis of courts’ case selection processes
Quelling quail declines
Animal Health Research Center Opens
Feeling hot, hot, hot: UGA scientists found that some kinds of “extreme organisms” evolved much earlier than previously thought
Kissing Cousins: Handbook of Avian Hybrids of the World
Nuts about that peanutty flavor
Catching the flu: UGA veterinarian Corrie Brown has a new perspective on disease
Fighting cancer with…pectin?
Blowing in the breeze: The impact of patent infringement lawsuits
And then there were – four! Andrew Paterson’s current research at UGA centers on polyploids
Uncovering Georgia’s history–Loss of Archaeological Sites Due to Urbanization
Oh deer! - Karl Miller is working to make life among deer easier
Exercise your mind: Exploring beneficial ways exercise alters brain chemistry
Helping prevent the spread of HIV
Clean fuel: Incorporating nanostructures to help store clean-burning hydrogen fuel
New species of diatom discovered by UGA scientist
The Wasp Hound
Helping narrow the achievement gap: Experiences of African-American adolescents in a predominantly black Atlanta suburb
An apple a day…how communication and lifestyles affect our consumption of fruits and vegetables
Understanding health choices: The Southern Center for Communication, Health and Poverty
Closing in on a killer: Chagas Disease
Preventing a worldwide flu epidemic– H5N1
‘More harm than good’: New analysis directly contradicts studies about the effectiveness of airbags
Weeding out alternatives: Naturally occurring cannabinoids
Seeing the light in dark meat
A case of black and white: UGA's Institute for Behavioral Research Community, Ethnicity and Identity in Context group
Deer deterrents

2004-2005
UGA researchers bring red wine’s health benefits to peanut foods
Doing the homework for policy: Understanding how contaminants travel through the food web
Monkeying around: First new monkey species found in Africa since 1984
Amphibians affected by global mercury pollution
UGA beetle specialist identifies new species
Lessons 2B learned: Ron Butchart investigates the formal education of freed slaves
Better elder care
Making waves
Vanishing timberlands
Preparing for the unthinkable: The first pharmacy practice rotation in weapons of mass destruction (WMD) medical response
“Sweet Thing” proves sweet project for media researcher
Secret lovers
Land of the Lost: Amphibians lose out at both ends
Cloned cow brings a little Sunshine into world
Monkeying around: The first direct scientific report of tool use among a population of wild capuchin monkeys
Not just fun and games: Connecting economics to ecology through gaming
Don’t quit quitting: Virtual reality can help
Pack Mules
Baby Talk 101
Catching a killer: Developing awareness about breast cancer

2003-2004
Glory be: To farmers, the morning glories can be a noxious weed
Land of the Lost: the plight of the loggerhead sea turtles
Working for children
Meteor strike produces natural “Georgiaites”
The bark is worse than the bite
Home Sweet Home: Home workers
UGA study reveals new role for germ cells
Caught in the crab pot: The plight of the diamondback terrapins
Sonogramming steaks
Olympic athletes and jet lag
From trash to gas: UGA scientists are developing a bio-refinery process that turns environmental obstacles into an environmental advantages.
Flying High: UGA researchers use blimps to make irrigation decisions
Lighting the Dark: A new breed of glow-in-the-dark pigments
Getting notice: An interactive CD that has allowed teachers to reduce disruptive behavior in the classroom
Carrion on
New uses for an old crop
Internet Farming? Could be, says UGA Researcher
Eureka! UGA's 2004 Creative Research Awards
Thief in the night: Combining bioinformatics with experimental testing to understand parasitic diseases
Fruit of their labor: Research has uncovered sex chromosomes–rare in plants–in papayas
Researchers developing tiny sensors for diabetics
Life sciences building to be named for president emeritus
Changing the state of relief
How a Slime Mold Came to the Aid of Alzheimer's Research
Winn win situation: Tiny, genetically engineered fish help assess health hazards in the environment
Recruiting wars: administrators are now competing in a very elite market for the best faculty
Go out and play: Doug Kleiber's work has changed the way we think about leisure
The Growth of Minority Buying Power
Tracking a Bird Killer: The Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study
Rx for kidneys
Pump up and smell the coffee: That cup of coffee in the morning does more than wake you up
A world of sorrow and hope: Understanding the biology of tropical diseases.
Protecting songbird habitat: Bob Cooper investigated the effects of timber harvesting in bottomland forests and found some surprizing results
Searching for a cancer cure is personal for UGA's Michael Pierce
Out with the old, in with the new: A radically new ecological theory
Weight watcher: Richard Lewis' study of the body mass index of Georgia children
Reef grief: Common bacteria kills elkhorn coral off Florida Keys
The Multiple Successes of Steve Stice



This page was last updated on Friday, October 5, 2007 03:16 PM EDT

UGA Alumni Association Support UGAs Academic Excellence
Giving to UGA
UGA News
Events at UGA
spacer
spacer


The University of Georgia • Athens, GA 30602 | UGA Directory Assistance 706/542-3000
Home | WebCT | eLearning Commons | Oasis | UGA Mail | Library | Gwinnett campus | Griffin campus | Tifton campus |
About this site | Department Directory | Feedback | Contact us | TEXT-ONLY VERSION

Sunday, November 8, 2009 06:16 AM EST