ZHOU Zi-wei,JIANG Rong-cai,ZHANG Jian-ning. Progesterone, a new hope for treatment of traumatic brain injury[J]. CHINESE JOURNAL OF TRAUMA, 2013, 29(9): 813-814.
[1]Stein DG. Gender, progesterone and the early stages of brain injury. Restor Neurol Neurosci, 1995, 8(1):105.
[2]Kasturi BS, Stein DG. Progesterone decreases cortical and sub-cortical edema in young and aged ovariectomized rats with brain injury. Restor Neurol Neurosci, 2009, 27(4):265-275.
[3]Chen R, Tu Y, Lin J, et al. The nongenomic effects of progesterone in repressing iNOS activation through P38 MAPK pathways in gonococci-infected polymorphonuclear leukocytes and the clinical significance. J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci, 2010, 30(1):119-125.
[4]Ishrat T, Sayeed I, Atif F, et al. Progesterone and allopregnanolone attenuate blood-brain barrier dysfunction following permanent focal ischemia by regulating the expression of matrix metalloproteinases. Exp Neurol, 2010, 226(1):183-190.
[5]Peterson TC, Anderson GD, Kantor ED, et al. A comparison of the effects of nicotinamide and progesterone on functional recovery of cognitive behavior following cortical contusion injury in the rat. J Neurotrauma, 2012, 29(18):2823-2830.
[6]Jung EM, An BS, Choi KC, et al. Apoptosis- and endoplasmic reticulum stress-related genes were regulated by estrogen and progesterone in the uteri of calbindin-D(9 k) and -D(28 k) knockout mice. J Cell Biochem, 2012, 113(1):194-203.
[7]Ghoumari AM, Baulieu EE, Schumacher M. Progesterone increases oligodendroglial cell proliferation in rat cerebellar slice cultures. Neuroscience, 2005, 135(1):47-58.
[8]Li Z, Wang B, Kan Z, et al. Progesterone increases circulating endothelial progenitor cells and induces neural regeneration after traumatic brain injury in aged rats. J Neurotrauma, 2012, 29(2):343-353.
[9]Guo Q, Sayeed I, Baronne LM, et al. Progesterone administration modulates AQP4 expression and edema after traumatic brain injury in male rats. Exp Neurol, 2006, 198(2):469-478.
[10]Jiang C, Cui K, Wang J, et al. Microglia and cyclooxygenase-2: possible therapeutic targets of progesterone for stroke. Int Immunopharmacol, 2011, 11(11):1925-1931.
[11]Peltier MR, Tee SC, Smulian JC. Effect of progesterone on proinflammatory cytokine production by monocytes stimulated with pathogens associated with preterm birth. Am J Reprod Immunol, 2008, 60(4):346-353.
[12]Koenig HL, Schumacher M, Ferzaz B, et al. Progesterone synthesis and myelin formation by Schwann cells. Science, 1995, 268(5216):1500-1503.
[13]Nilsen J, Brinton RD. Impact of progestins on estrogen-induced neuroprotection: synergy by progesterone and 19-norprogesterone and antagonism by medroxyprogesterone acetate. Endocrinology, 2002, 143(1):205-212.
[14]Wright DW, Kellermann AL, Hertzberg VS, et al. ProTECT: a randomized clinical trial of progesterone for acute traumatic brain injury. Ann Emerg Med, 2007, 49(4):391-402.
[15]Xiao G, Wei J, Yan W, et al. Improved outcomes from the administration of progesterone for patients with acute severe traumatic brain injury: a randomized controlled trial. Crit Care, 2008, 12(2):R61.