Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2590264 NeuroToxicology 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Sibutramine is a neuropharmacological drug that exerts central (CNS) and peripheral effects including noradrenaline (NA), and serotonin (5-HT) uptake inhibition. In addition, the drug is able to induce release from DA axons. We measured levels of circulating neurotransmitters in 20 healthy subjects during supine-resting (fasting) state before and after 15 mg of oral sibutramine. Systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and heart rate (HR) were also monitored. Sibutramine triggered sustained and progressive increase of NA, NA/Ad ratio and DBP. Slight increases of DA were also registered between the 60 and 240 min periods. The rise in DA tended to fade progressively, reaching basal level at 360 min period. Diastolic blood pressure, but neither SBP nor HR, showed significant increases that correlated positively with NA/Ad ratios. Slight but significant negative correlation was also found between DBP and DA. This correlation tended to fade throughout the trial to show no significance at the 360 min period. Although neither plasma serotonin (f-5HT) nor platelet serotonin (p-5HT) values showed significant variation throughout the trial, the f-5HT/p-5HT ratio showed significant decrease throughout. Significant negative correlation was found between f-5HT/p-5HT ratio and NA/Ad ratio. Our results indicate that sibutramine stimulates neural sympathetic activity but not adrenal sympathetic activity in healthy individuals. Further, sibutramine lowers parasympathetic activity. The moderate rise in diastolic blood pressure triggered by sibutramine would be associated with CNS-NA enhancement plus parasympathetic inhibition.

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