Bowyer John F, Thomas Monzy, Schmued Larry C, Ali Syed F
Division of Neurotoxicology, National Center for Toxicological Research, Jefferson, Arkansas, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2008 Oct;1139:127-39. doi: 10.1196/annals.1432.005.
Understanding the neurotoxic effects of acute high-dose exposures of laboratory animals to methamphetamine (METH) and amphetamine (AMPH) is of relevance to understanding the neurotoxicity incurred in humans from overdose or abuse of these substances. We present recent findings on the neurodegenerative effects of both a single high dose of 40 mg/kg and a 4-dose exposure to AMPH in the rat. Comparing these results with those we have previously observed in rodents exposed to either AMPH or METH helps further address how dose, hyperthermia, seizures and blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption interact to produce neurodegeneration. With regard to the 4-dose paradigm of AMPH exposure in the rat, our recent data, combined with previous findings, clearly show the importance of dose and hyperthermic interactions in producing neurodegeneration. The single high AMPH dose invariably resulted in extreme hyperthermia and brief episodes of clonic-tonic seizure activity in many rats. However, motor behavior indicative of status epilepticus was not observed in rats receiving the 40 mg/kg AMPH, which contrasts with what we have previously seen with 40 mg/kg METH dose in the mouse. This may explain why, unlike the mice given METH, there was minimal BBB disruption in the amygdala of rats. Nonetheless, in some of the surviving rats there was extensive neurodegeneration in the hippocampus and intralaminar and ventromedial/lateral thalamic nuclei. Early BBB disruption was seen in the hippocampus and may play an important role in the subsequent neurodegeneration. The fact that status epilepticus does not occur in rats that have major hippocampal and thalamic degeneration indicates that such damage may also occur in humans exposed to high doses of AMPH or METH in the absence of status epilepticus or prominent motor manifestations of seizure activity.
了解实验动物急性高剂量接触甲基苯丙胺(METH)和苯丙胺(AMPH)的神经毒性作用,对于理解人类因过量服用或滥用这些物质而产生的神经毒性具有重要意义。我们展示了近期关于大鼠单次高剂量40mg/kg和4次剂量接触AMPH的神经退行性影响的研究结果。将这些结果与我们之前在接触AMPH或METH的啮齿动物中观察到的结果进行比较,有助于进一步探讨剂量、体温过高、癫痫发作和血脑屏障(BBB)破坏如何相互作用以导致神经退行性变。关于大鼠接触AMPH的4次剂量模式,我们最近的数据与之前的研究结果相结合,清楚地表明了剂量和体温过高相互作用在导致神经退行性变中的重要性。单次高剂量的AMPH在许多大鼠中总是导致极度体温过高和短暂的阵挛-强直癫痫发作活动。然而,在接受40mg/kg AMPH的大鼠中未观察到指示癫痫持续状态的运动行为,这与我们之前在小鼠中给予40mg/kg METH剂量时所看到的情况形成对比。这可能解释了为什么与给予METH的小鼠不同,大鼠杏仁核中的血脑屏障破坏最小。尽管如此,在一些存活的大鼠中,海马体以及板内核和腹内侧/外侧丘脑核中存在广泛的神经退行性变。海马体中早期出现血脑屏障破坏,可能在随后的神经退行性变中起重要作用。在海马体和丘脑发生严重退化的大鼠中未出现癫痫持续状态,这一事实表明,在没有癫痫持续状态或明显的癫痫发作运动表现的情况下,高剂量接触AMPH或METH的人类也可能发生这种损伤。