Treatment of rats with the central thiamine antagonist, pyrithiamine, results in severe neurological symptoms such as ataxia and convulsions. Induction of proto-oncogene c-fos expression, often related to seizure activity, has been detected in the brains of thiamine-deficient rats by means of Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization. Region-selective increases of lactate observed following thiamine deficiency development are largely coincident with histologically vulnerable regions. When thiamine-deficient rats were treated with the calcium channel blocker, nicardipine, lesions associated with thiamine deficiency did not appear and there was no induction of c-fos mRNA expression. This suggests a neurocytoprotective role of nicardipine to neuronal cell damage in thiamine-deficient encephalopathy.