Sandusky G E, Means J R
Toxicol Lett. 1987 Sep;38(1-2):177-86. doi: 10.1016/0378-4274(87)90126-3.
LY-195115 is a new (investigational) inotropic agent. When given orally to either young adult rats or mice, single doses of 2500 or 5000 mg/kg were tolerated with minimal lethality. Clinical signs included muscle weakness, hypoactivity, and evidence of hemorrhage. Dogs and monkeys survived a single oral dose of 10 and 5 mg/kg, respectively; however, there was sinus tachycardia for 6-8 h post dose in both species. Rats (20/sex/group) were fed diets containing LY-195115 in concentrations of 0, 0.005, 0.025, or 0.1% for 3 months. The average daily intake of the compound was approximately 0, 3.5, 17, or 70 mg/kg in both sexes. Deaths occurred only in the high-dose group. Body weight gain, food consumption, and efficiency of food utilization were significantly reduced in males in the 0.1% dose group and animals of both sexes in this group had changes in hematology, clinical chemistry, and urinalysis parameters indicative of renal damage. Crystals containing LY-195115 were present in the urine of animals from the 0.025% and 0.1% treatment groups. Secondary hydronephrosis due to kidney stone formation was observed on gross and microscopic pathologic evaluation in the males of the 0.025% group and animals of both sexes in the 0.1% group. In addition, periarteritis was present in the adventitia and muscularis of small and medium-sized arteries in the pancreas, lymph node, kidney, and stomach of some animals in all LY-195115 treatment groups. No overt signs of toxicity were produced in beagle dogs (4/sex/group) given daily oral doses of 0.03, 0.12, or 0.5 mg/kg of LY-195115 for 3 months. The only adverse effect was the occurrence of focal subendocardial fibroplasia in the heart in 2 high-dose male dogs. Thus, subchronic exposure of rats to doses of LY-195115 as high as 70 mg/kg produced minimal mortality, renal toxicity, and mild, limited vascular changes, while dogs tolerated doses up to 0.5 mg/kg with no evidence of any effect of treatment except minimal histological changes in the heart consequent to the expected cardiotonic action of the compound.
LY - 195115是一种新型(试验性)强心剂。给成年大鼠或小鼠口服时,2500或5000mg/kg的单剂量耐受性良好,致死率极低。临床症状包括肌肉无力、活动减少和出血迹象。犬和猴分别经口给予10和5mg/kg的单剂量后存活;然而,两个物种在给药后6 - 8小时均出现窦性心动过速。将大鼠(每组20只,雌雄各半)喂食含浓度为0、0.005、0.025或0.1%的LY - 195115的饲料3个月。该化合物的平均每日摄入量在两性中分别约为0、3.5、17或70mg/kg。仅在高剂量组出现死亡。0.1%剂量组的雄性大鼠以及该组的雌雄动物体重增加、食物消耗和食物利用效率均显著降低,血液学、临床化学和尿液分析参数出现变化,表明存在肾损伤。0.025%和0.1%治疗组动物的尿液中存在含LY - 195115的晶体。在0.025%组的雄性大鼠以及0.1%组的雌雄动物中,经大体和显微镜病理评估观察到因肾结石形成导致的继发性肾盂积水。此外,在所有LY - 195115治疗组的一些动物的胰腺、淋巴结、肾脏和胃的中小动脉外膜和肌层中存在动脉周围炎。给比格犬(每组4只,雌雄各半)每日口服0.03、0.12或0.5mg/kg的LY - 195115,持续3个月,未产生明显的毒性迹象。唯一的不良反应是2只高剂量雄性犬心脏出现局灶性心内膜下纤维化。因此,大鼠亚慢性暴露于高达70mg/kg剂量的LY - 195115时,死亡率极低,有肾毒性,血管变化轻微且有限,而犬耐受高达0.5mg/kg的剂量,除了因该化合物预期的强心作用导致心脏出现轻微的组织学变化外,未发现任何治疗效果的证据。