Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2597524 Toxicology 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Soman poisoning is known to induce full-blown tonic–clonic seizures, status epilepticus (SE), seizure-related brain damage (SRBD) and lethality. Previous studies in guinea-pigs have shown that racemic ketamine (KET), with atropine sulfate (AS), is very effective in preventing death, stopping seizures and protecting sensitive brain areas when given up to 1 h after a supra-lethal challenge of soman. The active ketamine isomer, S(+) ketamine (S-KET), is more potent than the racemic mixture and it also induces less side-effects. To confirm the efficacy of KET and to evaluate the potential of S-KET for delayed medical treatment of soman-induced SE, we studied different S-KET dose regimens using the same paradigm used with KET. Guinea-pigs received pyridostigmine (26 μg/kg, IM) 30 min before soman (62 μg/kg, 2 LD50, IM), followed by therapy consisting of atropine methyl nitrate (AMN) (4 mg/kg, IM) 1 min following soman exposure. S-KET, with AS (10 mg/kg), was then administered IM at different times after the onset of seizures, starting at 1 h post-soman exposure. The protective efficacy of S-KET proved to be comparable to KET against lethality and SRBD, but at doses two to three times lower. As with KET, delaying treatment by 2 h post-poisoning greatly reduced efficacy. Conditions that may have led to an increased S-KET brain concentration (increased doses or number of injections, adjunct treatment with the oxime HI-6) did not prove to be beneficial. In summary, these observations confirm that ketamine, either racemic or S-KET, in association with AS and possibly other drugs, could be highly effective in the delayed treatment of severe soman intoxication.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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