Publications by authors named "J Metys"

Dithiadenoxide, a product of metabolic S-oxidation of the H1-antihistaminic agent dithiaden (bisulepin, Dithiaden), is also an effective histaminic H1-antagonist in pharmacological experiments in in vivo conditions. In contrast to dithiaden, dithiadenoxide exerts a demonstrable inhibitory action as much as the subtoxic or sublethal dosage in experiments in mice and rats. Its acute toxicity in mice and guinea-pigs substantially decreases; acute toxicological findings in rats are not unambiguous.

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Recent research provided evidence that effective H1-antihistaminic drugs need not exert a central and sedative action. Non-sedative H1-antihistaminics can aptly replace older combined preparations of classical H1-antihistaminics, motivated by an effort to weaken their sedative action by the concurrent administration of pharmaceutical preparations with a central stimulating action (e.g.

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In a representative group of 10 conventional antihistaminic agents, a comparison of their H1-antagonistic efficacy was carried out in a series of pharmacological tests. A very good correlation of findings obtained under in vivo conditions in guinea-pigs (tests of detoxication of histamine and histamine aerosol) and a test in rats, which examined the influence on local changes induced by histamine in the dermal region, was demonstrated. No statistically significant correlation of in vivo findings and receptor binding studies on membranes of the rat brain (displacement of (3H)-mepyramine) was found.

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Pipethiadene, a prophylactic of vasomotoric headaches of the series of 4,9-dihydrothieno(2,3-c)-2-benzothiepine derivatives, shows a peripheralpharmacological profile of an antiallergic agent. The experiments in rats showed a high antianaphylactic effect of pipethiadene in the passive cutaneous anaphylaxis (PCA) test. Pipethiadene also exerted intensive antianaphylactoid action in rats on the liberator of histamine, compound 48/80, on dextran, and in the use of a combination of ovalbumin with indomethacin.

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