Literature DB >> 11575864

Dynamic and kinetic effects of chronic citalopram treatment in experimental hepatic encephalopathy.

G Apelqvist1, C Wikell, B Carlsson, S Hjorth, P B Bergqvist, J Ahlner, F Bengtsson.   

Abstract

Chronic hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neuropsychiatric syndrome that arises in liver-impaired subjects. Patients with HE display various neuropsychiatric symptoms including affective disturbances and may therefore likely receive treatment with novel thymoleptics like citalopram (CIT). The simultaneous pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic outcome of the commonly used serotonin-selective thymoleptic drugs in liver-impaired subjects with pending chronic HE is far from understood today. We therefore investigated the effects of chronic, body-weight-adjusted (10 mg x kg(-1) x day(-1)), treatment with CIT in rats with and without portacaval shunts (PCS). Open-field activity was monitored. The 5-HT, 5-HIAA, noradrenaline (NA), and dopamine (DA) output were assessed in the frontal neocortex. The racemic levels of CIT and its metabolites DCIT and DDCIT, including the S- and R-enantiomers, were determined in serum, brain parenchyma, and extracellular fluid. The rats with PCS showed higher (2-3-fold) levels of CIT than rats undergoing a sham treatment with CIT in all compartments investigated. The PCS rats also showed elevated levels of DCIT and DDCIT. No major differences in the S/R ratios between PCS rats and control rats could be detected. The CIT treatment resulted in neocortical output differences between PCS rats and control rats mainly within the 5-HT and DA systems but not within the NA system. For the 5-HT system, this change was further evidenced by outspoken elevation in 5-HT output after KCI-depolarizing challenges. Moreover, the CIT treatment to PCS rats was shown to "normalize" the metabolic turnover of 5-HT, measured as a profound lowering of a basal elevation in the 5-HIAA levels. The CIT treatment resulted in an increased or "normalized" behavioral activity in the PCS group. Therefore, a dose-equal chronic treatment with CIT in PCS rats produced pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic changes not observed in control rats. The results further support the contention of an altered 5-HT neurotransmission prevailing in the chronic HE condition. However, the tentatively beneficial behavioral response also seen following chronic CIT treatment to PCS rats in this study has to be viewed in relation to both the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic changes observed.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11575864     DOI: 10.1097/00002826-200011000-00003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Neuropharmacol        ISSN: 0362-5664            Impact factor:   1.592


  2 in total

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Authors:  Andrew Douglass; Hanan Al Mardini; Christopher O Record
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 3.584

Review 2.  Contributions of microdialysis to new alternative therapeutics for hepatic encephalopathy.

Authors:  Liliana Rivera-Espinosa; Esaú Floriano-Sánchez; José Pedraza-Chaverrí; Elvia Coballase-Urrutia; Aristides Iii Sampieri; Daniel Ortega-Cuellar; Noemí Cárdenas-Rodríguez; Liliana Carmona-Aparicio
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2013-08-05       Impact factor: 5.923

  2 in total

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