Prostaglandins Leukot Med
March 1985
In the context of recent work showing numerous interactions between ethanol, essential fatty acids (EFA) and prostanoids, we have evaluated the effects of gamma-linolenic acid methyl ester (GLA 99%; 18:3, n-6), on hepatic pathology induced by ethanol in rats. Groups of animals were pair-fed an alcohol-containing liquid diet or an iso-caloric maltose-dextrin diet. Animals fed ethanol for ten days had markedly increased hepatic triglycerides and histological evidence of fatty liver.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of studies was conducted to evaluate the effects of phosphatidylserine (PS) in aged Fischer 344 rats. No effects were observed in any of four psychomotor tasks in which aged rats normally show deficits, nor on measures of shock sensitivity. However, significant dose-related effects on retention of passive avoidance were observed when PS was given both 30 min prior to training and retention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBoth clinical and laboratory studies suggest that age-related memory deficits may be due, at least in part, to disturbances in muscarinic acetylcholine (mAChR) receptors. In order to further evaluate this premise, the present studies examined the electrophysiological responses rates of hippocampal pyramidal cells to iontophoretically applied ACh in young, middle-age and aged animals. The relationship between age and muscarinic agonist and antagonist binding in the hippocampus was also examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopharmacology (Berl)
July 1985
Twenty-five schizophrenic outpatient subjects in a depot neuroleptic discontinuation study received an amphetamine challenge approximately 6 weeks after their last dose. Only five of these showed greater than three-point increases in positive symptoms on the BPRS, and all five relapsed within 30 days of the challenge. The 20 with less than three-point increases in positive symptoms showed extremely variable stability, relapsing from 20- greater than 600 days after the challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharm Pharmacol
December 1984
[3H]Quinuclidinyl benzilate and [3H]spiperone binding to murine lymphocytes is displaceable but differs from binding to brain receptor sites for these ligands: (1) binding to intact lymphocyte preparations was not saturable; (2) disruption of intact lymphocytes was associated with a marked loss of displaceable ligand binding; (3) drugs differentially displace these ligands in lymphocytes compared to brain. Displaceable binding was increased following incubation of lymphocytes under phospholipid methylating conditions; however, marked effects on cell viability and cell recovery make it difficult to interpret these binding changes. If dopaminergic and cholinergic receptors do exist on lymphocytes, their binding characteristics are profoundly different from comparable cns receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlunted responses to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulation have been found consistently in depressed patients, and have been reported in other affective disorders as well. In a smaller number of schizophrenic subjects, TRH tests have generally been normal. Thus, it has been suggested that this test may have diagnostic utility in distinguishing schizophrenia from affective disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSix patients with chronic schizophrenia were studied with positron emission tomography (PET) before and after neuroleptic treatment, using fluorine-18-labeled fluorodeoxyglucose. After treatment, the mean whole-slice glucose metabolic rate at the level of the basal ganglia showed a 25% increase. However, patterns of frontal hypometabolism observed with the schizophrenic patients were not altered by medication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies have previously demonstrated low somatostatin levels in autopsy cortical tissue from Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and low somatostatin levels in CSF obtained from subjects with dementia. We evaluated levels of this peptide in 21 non-depressed subjects, 10 with AD, 2 with Parkinson's disease (PD), and 9 with other neurological conditions. The AD patients had significantly lower mean CSF somatostatin than the "other" neurological patients (14.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSynaptosomes from rat cerebral cortex incubated with 3H-S-adenosyl-L-methionine (3H-SAM) displayed an increase in chloroform- extractable tritium when norepinephrine was added to the reaction mixture. The products of this mixture were maximally generated from intact synaptosomes, only partially inhibited by propranolol, and not enhanced by exogenous phospholipids. Thin layer chromatographic analysis of these chloroform extracts in three solvent systems yielded large norepinephrine- stimulated peaks of radioactivity that did not consistently co-chromatograph with authentic methylated phospholipid standards: phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine (PME), phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine (PDE), and phosphatidylcholine (PC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Psychopharmacol
February 1983
Phospholipids in red blood cells (RBCs) of schizophrenics and controls were determined. Three different RBC preparations and two different extraction methods were used. Phospholipids were separated by thin layer chromatography and by high pressure liquid chromatography, and were quantified by phosphorus analysis and by ultraviolet absorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopharmacology (Berl)
February 1983
In stable schizophrenic outpatients with predominantly "defect state" symptomatology amphetamine caused a reduction in negative symptoms that was statistically significant but not complete (i.e. these symptoms remained clinically discernible).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Biochem Psychopharmacol
January 1983
Psychopharmacology (Berl)
August 1981
Forty inpatient volunteers with diagnoses of schizophrenia were randomly assigned to treatment either with trebenzomine or thioridazine in a double-blind study of clinical antipsychotic efficacy following a 1-week placebo treatment. Psychopathology was rated using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and Clinical Global Impression (CGI). There was a significant difference in therapeutic response to the two drugs in that psychopathology decreased significantly for the thioridazine group, but not for the trebenzomine group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProstaglandin (PG) E1 enhances formation of 3H-adenosine-3',5'-cyclic monophasphate (3H-cAMP) in platelets pulse-labeled with 3H-adenine. This response was assessed as an index of receptor sensitivity and of PG function. Prostagladin E1-stimulated 3H-cAMP accumulation in paltelets from schizophrenics was significantly reduced compared with control subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen quaternary-chlorpromazine (Q-CPZ) was administered intraventricularly (ICV) to rats, it induced a lateralized dystonic reaction, which progressed to head-to-tail barrel rolling. The syndrome persisted for approximately 10 minutes, was not antagonized by pretreatment with drugs used to treat extrapyramidal movement disorders, and could not be mimicked by ICV administration of dopamine antagonists. Unlike known dopamine antagonists, Q-CPZ does not alter dopamine turnover, cause prolactin release in vivo, or bind to dopamine/neuroleptic receptors in vitro.
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