| Literature DB >> 6524019 |
F W Jennings, G M Urquhart, P K Murray, B M Miller.
Abstract
Chronic infections of Trypanosoma brucei GVR 35/2 in mice, normally relapse after conventional chemotherapy because infective trypanosomes in the brain escape the action of the drug and are able to multiply and eventually re-establish a parasitaemia. However, if treatment consists of a single dose of 1 x 20 mg/kg suramin followed 3 or 4 days later by a 2-substituted 5-nitroimidazole, given intraperitoneally, either as a single dose or as a course of daily injections, relapses rarely occur and the majority of the mice are permanently cured. The minimum effective levels for the three 5-nitroimidazole compounds (Merck Sharp and Dohme, Rahway, NJ, USA) were two doses of 10 mg/kg of L611,744; four doses of 10 mg/kg of MK 436; and three doses of 10 mg/kg of L634,549. Generally it was more effective to divide a given total dose into two or more daily doses, rather than to give the 4-nitroimidazole as a single treatment. The effective dose levels are low enough to be of practical significance and, if the 5-nitroimidazoles were ever licensed for humans, might well prove to be an alternative to melarsoprol treatment for the elimination of trypanosomes from the central nervous system.Entities:
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Year: 1984 PMID: 6524019 DOI: 10.1007/bf00927120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Z Parasitenkd ISSN: 0044-3255