Dorandeu Frederic, Carpentier Pierre, Baubichon Dominique, Four Elise, Bernabé Denis, Burckhart Marie-France, Lallement Guy
Département de Toxicologie, CRSSA, 24 avenue des Maquis du Gresivaudan, F-38 702 La Tronche, France.
Brain Res. 2005 Jul 27;1051(1-2):164-75. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2005.06.013.
Nerve agent poisoning is known to induce full-blown seizures, seizure-related brain damage (SRBD), and lethality. Effective and quick management of these seizures is critical. In conditions of delayed treatment, presently available measures are inadequate calling for optimization of therapeutic approaches. The effects of ketamine/atropine sulfate (KET/AS) combinations were thus assessed as potential valuable delayed therapy in soman-poisoned male guinea pigs. Animals received pyridostigmine (26 microg/kg, i.m.) 30 min before soman (62 microg/kg, i.m.) followed by therapy consisting of atropine methyl nitrate (4 mg/kg) 1 min later. KET was then administered i.m. at different times after the onset of seizures, starting at 30 min post-poisoning. KET was always injected with atropine sulfate, itself given at a dose that was unable to modify seizures (2 to 10 mg/kg). Different treatment schemes (dose and time of injection) were evaluated. Sub-anesthetic doses of KET (10 mg/kg) could prevent lethality and stop ongoing seizures only when administered 30 min after challenge. An extended delay before treatment (up to 2 h) called for an increase in KET dose (up to 60 mg/kg three times), thus reaching anesthetic levels but without the need of any ventilation support. KET proved effective in stopping seizures, highly reducing SRBD and allowing survival with a progressive loss of efficacy when treatment was delayed beyond 1 h post-challenge. Preliminary results suggest that association with the benzodiazepine midazolam (1 mg/kg) might be interesting when treatment is initiated 2 h after poisoning, i.e., when KET efficacy is dramatically reduced. All in all, these observations suggest that KET, in association with atropine sulfate and possibly other drugs, may be highly effective in the delayed treatment of severe soman intoxication.
已知神经毒剂中毒会引发全面癫痫发作、与癫痫相关的脑损伤(SRBD)以及致死性。对这些癫痫发作进行有效且快速的处理至关重要。在治疗延迟的情况下,现有的措施并不充分,需要优化治疗方法。因此,评估了氯胺酮/硫酸阿托品(KET/AS)组合作为沙林中毒雄性豚鼠潜在有价值的延迟治疗方法的效果。动物在注射沙林(62微克/千克,肌肉注射)前30分钟接受吡啶斯的明(26微克/千克,肌肉注射),随后1分钟后接受硝酸甲基阿托品(4毫克/千克)治疗。然后在癫痫发作开始后的不同时间肌肉注射氯胺酮,从中毒后30分钟开始。氯胺酮总是与硫酸阿托品一起注射,硫酸阿托品的给药剂量无法改变癫痫发作(2至10毫克/千克)。评估了不同的治疗方案(剂量和注射时间)。亚麻醉剂量的氯胺酮(10毫克/千克)仅在攻击后30分钟给药时才能预防致死性并停止正在发作的癫痫。治疗前的延迟时间延长(长达2小时)需要增加氯胺酮剂量(高达60毫克/千克,分三次),从而达到麻醉水平,但无需任何通气支持。氯胺酮被证明在停止癫痫发作方面有效,能大幅减少SRBD,并在攻击后1小时后延迟治疗时疗效逐渐丧失的情况下仍能使动物存活。初步结果表明,在中毒后2小时开始治疗时,即氯胺酮疗效显著降低时,与苯二氮䓬类咪达唑仑(1毫克/千克)联合使用可能会有效果。总而言之,这些观察结果表明,氯胺酮与硫酸阿托品以及可能的其他药物联合使用,在严重沙林中毒的延迟治疗中可能非常有效。