| Literature DB >> 35202099 |
Bárbara Silva1,2, Jorge Soares1,2, Carolina Rocha-Pereira1,2,3, Přemysl Mladěnka4, Fernando Remião1,2.
Abstract
Khat (Catha edulis) is a recreational, chewed herbal drug that has been used as a psychostimulant for centuries in East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, namely in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Yemen. However, the growing worldwide availability of khat has produced widespread concern. The plant comprises a large number of active substances, among which cathinone, cathine, and norephedrine are the main constituents, which can be included in the group of sympathomimetics of natural origin. In fact, these compounds are amphetamine analogues, and, as such, they have amphetamine-like nervous system stimulant effects. Chewing the leaves gives people a sensation of well-being and increases energy, alertness, and self-confidence. The chronic use of khat is, however, associated with severe cardiac, neurological, psychological, and gastrointestinal complications. The psychological dependence and withdrawal symptoms of khat are the reasons for its prolonged use. The aim of this paper is to review current knowledge on the khat plant with toxicokinetic and toxicodynamic perspectives. Namely, this review paper addresses in vitro, in vivo, and human studies. The models used, as well as the concentrations and doses with the respective biological effects, are discussed. Additionally, the main drug interactions involved with khat are described.Entities:
Keywords: amphetamine-like; cathine; cathinone; kinetics; norpseudoephedrine; toxicology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35202099 PMCID: PMC8875844 DOI: 10.3390/toxins14020071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Chemical structures of cathinone, cathine (norpseudoephedrine), noradrenaline, norephedrine, and amphetamine. Structural differences to amphetamine are underlined (blue) in the other compounds.
Figure 2Historical sequence of the countries in which khat became a controlled substance.
Maximum plasma and terminal half-life found in plasma of healthy human volunteers after khat chewing.
| Subjects | Oral Cathinone Dose | Maximum Plasma | Terminal Elimination Half-Life | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Six male volunteers | 0.8 mg (54–71 g of fresh khat leaves) | 127 ± 53 ng/mL after 2.1 ± 0.5 h | 4.3 ± 1.7 h | [ |
| Five volunteers (two females and three males) | 0.8–1 mg | 83 ± 42 ng/mL after 1.5–3.5 h | - | [ |
| Four volunteers (two male and two female) | 0.6 mg (26–59 g of fresh khat leaves) | 58.9 ± 18.8 ng/mL after 2.31 ± 0.65 h | 1.5 ± 0.8 h | [ |
| Six male volunteers | 0.5 mg | 1 h | - | [ |
Figure 3Stereoselective cathinone metabolism and the main metabolites excreted in urine (adapted from [24,25]).
Figure 4Mechanism of toxicity of cathinone on the central nervous system. (a) Dopamine release induction, (b) MAO inhibition in neurons and astrocytes.
In vitro studies of khat.
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| KB cells [ | 0–80 ng/mL | LD50 of 40 ng/mL |
| 1BR.3 and XP2Bi [ | Biphasic survival (LD50 of 20 ng/mL for 25% of the cell population and 75 ng/mL for the more resistant subpopulation) | |
| Mouse interstitial cells [ | 0.06, 0.6, 6, 30 | The highest concentrations (30 mg/mL and 60 mg/mL): |
| HL-60, Jurkat, NB4 cell lines, and | Organic khat extract induced apoptotic cell death, regulated | |
| MOLM-13, MOLM-14, NB4 and MV-4-11 cell lines [ | 200 μg/mL | Organic khat extract activated a distinct cell death involving mitochondrial damage and morphological features of autophagy |
| SKOV3 [ | 0.01, 0.03, 0.1, 0.3, | Khat induces reduced cell size, |
| In silico [ | Khat constituents (cathine, cathinone, and catheduline): |
Figure 5Common adverse effects of khat abuse [1,3,26,51].
Pharmacological interactions between khat and clinically used drugs.
| Drug Classes | Drug | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Anaesthetics | benoxinate (0.4%) [ | Consumption of khat (12 h prior surgery): |
| sevoflurane (2%) plus | Consumption of khat (4 h prior surgery): | |
| Antibiotics | ampicillin (500 mg); | The astringent activity of tannins present in khat on GI surface can prevent/reduce absorption of oral drugs |
GI, gastrointestinal.