Oxidative stress and post-stroke depression: possible therapeutic role of polyphenols?
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to investigate the role of oxidative stress in post-stroke depression and hypothesize that polyphenols could serve as therapeutic targets for its treatment.
Results Summary
The study suggests that oxidative stress contributes to post-stroke depression and that polyphenols may mitigate ischemic damage and inflammation, potentially improving outcomes.
Population
Post-stroke depression patients (theoretical, as the study is hypothesis-driven).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
polyphenols | decrease | post-stroke depression | post-stroke patients | - | may be useful as therapeutics targets | #1 |
oxidative stress | increase | depressive-like symptoms following stroke | post-stroke patients | - | implicated in the pathogenesis | #2 |
reactive oxygen species | increase | oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, and DNA damage | neural tissues | - | cause | #3 |
antioxidants including polyphenols | decrease | ischemia and stroke | - | - | may play an important role in the outcomes | #4 |
antioxidants including polyphenols | decrease | neurons against oxidative stress | - | - | ability to protect | #5 |
antioxidants including polyphenols | decrease | ischemic damage | - | - | mitigate | #6 |
antioxidants including polyphenols | neutral | generation of nitric oxide from the vascular endothelium | - | - | ability to interact with | #7 |
antioxidants including polyphenols | decrease | inflammation | - | - | decrease | #8 |
polyphenols | decrease | post-stroke depression | post-stroke patients | - | may be a useful new therapeutic target | #9 |
Post-stroke depression is a common neuropsychiatric affective disorder that may develop after a stroke event. In addition to abnormalities in the biogenic amine neurotransmitters and cytokine expression induced by stroke we will focus on the role of oxidative stress and hypothesize that polyphenols may be useful as therapeutics targets for the treatment of post-stroke depression. In this paper, we discuss the hypothesis that increased oxidative stress in cerebral tissues during ischemia is implicated in the pathogenesis of depressive-like symptoms following stroke. There is substantive evidence regarding the role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of both stroke and depression, which provides support to this hypothesis. Reactive oxygen species, generated during stroke, cause oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, and DNA damage in neural tissues. The resultant pathophysiological processes in the neural tissues could be considered a leading mechanism in the induction of post-stroke depression. Antioxidants including polyphenols therefore, may play an important role in the outcomes of ischemia and stroke, due to their ability to protect neurons against oxidative stress, to mitigate ischemic damage via inhibition of lipid peroxidation and ability to interact with the generation of nitric oxide from the vascular endothelium, and also to decrease inflammation. These data suggest that polyphenols may therefore be a useful new therapeutic target for the treatment of post-stroke depression.