Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2202068 Neurochemistry International 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The single and combined effects of carbamazepine and vinpocetine on the release of the excitatory amino acid neurotransmitter glutamate, on the rise in internal Na+ (Nai, as determined with SBFI), and on the rise in internal Ca2+ (Cai, as determined with fura-2) induced by an increased permeability of presynaptic Na+ channels, with veratridine, or by an increased permeability of presynaptic Ca2+ channels with high K+, were investigated in isolated hippocampal nerve endings. The present study shows that carbamazepine and vinpocetine, both inhibit dose dependently the release of preloaded [3H]Glu induced by veratridine. However, carbamazepine is two orders of magnitude less potent than vinpocetine. The calculated IC50's for carbamazepine and vinpocetine to inhibit veratridine-induced [3H]Glu release are 200 and 2 μM, respectively. Consistently 150 μM carbamazepine and 1.5 μM vinpocetine reduce the veratridine-induced rise in Nai in a similar extent. The single effects of carbamazepine and of vinpocetine on the presynaptic Na+ channel mediated responses, namely the rise in Nai and the release of Glu induced by veratridine, are additive. Responses that depend on the entrance of external Ca2+ via presynaptic Ca2+ channels, such as the release of [3H]Glu and the rise in Cai induced by high K+, are insensitive to 300 μM carbamazepine and slightly reduced by 5 μM vinpocetine. It is concluded that the additive effects of carbamazepine, which is one of the most common antiepileptic drugs, and vinpocetine that besides its known neuroprotective action and antiepileptic potential is a memory enhancer, may perhaps be advantageous in the treatment of epileptic patients.

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