1,720,968 research outputs found

    Successful treatment of epilepsy with serotonin reuptake inhibitors: proposed mechanism

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    The widely used antidepressants Specific Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI) have been tried with success as anticonvulsants in cases of nonsymptomatic epilepsy. This attempt was performed on the basis of experimental data suggesting the involvement of impairments of the serotonin system in the genesis of epilepsy. This overview summarizes the clinical data and presents biochemical and neurochemical evidences suggesting the mechanism of the therapeutic effects of SSRI in nonsymptomatic epilepsy. In particular, studies on blood-borne neutral amino acids and platelet serotonin transporter (SERT) in epileptics suggest: (a) That a decreased brain availability of tryptophan may be related to some types of epilepsy. (b) That reduction of the density of SERT may be a homeostatic reaction in the brain following epileptic seizures. The possibility that derangements in the brain serotonin system may be involved in the generation of epileptic seizures has been discussed since long time ago [1]. Over the years, this possibility has been tested in animal models, among which the GEPR (genetically prone rat) model [2, 3]. Even more importantly, links between noradrenaline and serotonin deficiencies and the epileptic human brain have been found [3]. This theory is at odds with the initial suggestions that monoamine uptake blocking antidepressants are convulsants [4–6]. The lack of contradiction of this circumstance and the noradrenaline/serotonin theory in epilepsy has been discussed at length by Jobe and Browning [3]. The main point discussed is that doses much above the antidepressant therapeutic range are those leading to convulsions, thus eliminating the possibility that potentiation of the amine function may be the basis for the proconvulsant effect. The core of the theory discussed by Jobe and Browning [3] is that epilepsy and affective illnesses have a common background. In their view, the two illnesses have different intrinsic fabricators, i.e. neuronal circuits which actually initiate and sustain dysfunctional episodes. However, they share common exterior defensive shields which are made up of circuits using noradrenaline and serotonin and protect the system from a deranged function of the intrinsic fabricators. This may lead to either the epileptic pathology or affective disorders, such as depression, according to the particular fabricator involved. These ideas have been tested by those authors in the genetically epilepsy prone rat model GEPR. The idea that serotonin could be involved in epileptogenesis was already present in the early 1990s [7–10]. Even much earlier works had shown in animal models that 5-hydroxytryptophan, a serotonin precursor, has an antiepileptic effect [e.g. 11, 12]. Our group thus set out at that time to test in a clinical trial whether potentiation of the brain serotoninergic system could be helpful in patients with drug refractory epilepsy. Fluoxetine was initially added to ongoing treatments with carbamazepine or carbamazepine/phenobarbital and later this was repeated with cytalopram in another group of patients. Later over the years, we tested in epileptic patients and in controls the blood levels of the serotonin precursor tryptophan and of the neutral amino acids able to compete for the same carrier for the passage of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). In addition, we studied the status of the serotonin transporter (SERT) of the venous blood platelets in epileptic patients vs. controls. In the present overview we try and discuss the overall picture emerging from these approaches. The results do not contradict the theoretical framework proposed by Jobe and Browning [3]

    Is the Platelet Serotonin Transporter Different in Venous vs. Arterial Blood?

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    The binding of labelled paroxetine to the serotonin transporter (SERT) of platelet membranes has been studied in both venous and mixed venous/arterial blood of the rat. In addition, we studied the inhibition of paroxetine binding to SERT by quipazine and N-methyl-quipazine (NMQ). The results indicate differences in affinity for the two test drugs, quipazine and NMQ, in venous vs. mixed venous/arterial blood. This suggests different post-translational modifications of SERT in platelets of arterial vs. venous blood

    Sex differences in human lymphocyte Na,K-ATPase as studied by labeled ouabain binding

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    Phosphocreatine can to some extent compensate for the lack of ATP synthesis that is caused in the brain by deprivation of oxygen or glucose. Treatment of in vitro rat hippocampal slices with creatine increases the neuronal store of phosphocreatine. In this way it increases the resistance of the tissue to anoxic or ischemic damage. In in vitro brain slices pretreatment with creatine delays anoxic depolarization (AD) and prevents the irreversible loss of evoked potentials that is caused by transient anoxia, although it seems so far not to be active against milder, not AD-mediated, damage. Although creatine crosses poorly the blood-brain barrier, its administration in vivo at high doses through the intracerebroventricular or the intraperitoneal way causes an increase of cerebral phosphocreatine that has been shown to be of therapeutic value in vitro. Accordingly, preliminary data show that creatine pretreatment decreases ischemic damage in vivo

    Catatonic features in major depression relieved by electroconvulsive treatment: parallel evaluation of the status of platelet serotonin transporter

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    The aim of this research was to follow parallelly the clinical status of a patient and the dynamics of the serotonin transporter (SERT), a likely player in the effect of electroconvulsive treatment (ECT), a powerful tool against deep depression. A patient affected by major depression with catatonic features, not responding to pharmacological therapy, underwent ECT. Evaluations of the binding of labelled paroxetine to venous blood platelet SERT were parallel to the assessments of clinical improvements. The density of platelet SERT, starting from a low level before ECT, displayed an initial steep increase peaking the day after the third electroconvulsive session (5 days after the start of ECT). This was followed by a rapid decrease, which seemed to precede the process of clinical recovery. These results were found in a case of unavoidable ECT treatment. If generalizable, they suggest interesting ideas about the still mysterious mechanism of ECT antidepressant action. Electroconvulsive therapy (Cerletti, 1941, 1950) is recognized as the most efficacious treatment in cases of major depressions accompanied by catatonic features with a life threat for the patient (APA, 2001; Abrams, 2002). We describe a case of an elderly woman affected by major depression and catatonic signs successfully treated with ECT. The course of the eight electroconvulsive treatment (ECT) sessions at alternate days was accompanied by marked changes in the density of platelet membrane serotonin transporter (SERT)

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Ethanol Inhibits the Binding of Substance P to Rat Brain Cortex NK1 Receptors

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    The binding of 125I-labeled substance P (SP) to rat brain cortex membranes has been studied under control conditions and in the presence of ethanol. The binding of SP at low concentrations (20-1000 pM) gave two components, one with a KD value of 80 pM and another one with a KD of 500 pM. The higher-affinity component is due to NK1 receptors, as confirmed by the inhibition of the SP binding by the rodent NK1 specific agonist [Sar9 Met(O2)11]SP. Ethanol (1.7 mM) added to the binding assays inhibited by more than 50% the specific binding at a very low SP concentration (20 pM); however, it had no effect at SP concentrations ranging from 50 to 120 pM. This suggests a decrease by ethanol of the affinity of SP to the NK1 receptors involved in this binding component. The ethanol effect disappeared at [EtOH] ≤0.17 mM
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