Roebel L E, Florczyk A P, Buyniski J P
Res Commun Chem Pathol Pharmacol. 1979 Jan;23(1):29-35.
Prazosin produces a "first-dose" phenomenon in man clinically characterized by an exaggerated hypotensive response to the initial dose of the drug, with subsequent doses not producing this exaggerated effect. In spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), prazosin (1 mg kg po) produced a similar effect, appreciably reducing systolic blood pressure at 12 hours after the first dose but having little or no effect at 12 hours after the subsequent doses. In contrast, BL-5111, an antihypertensive agent similar in chemical structure and shown in previous studies to be slightly less potent than prazosin but with appreciably less alpha-adrenergic receptor antagonist activity, had no effect on blood pressure at 12 hours after dosing (1 and 2 mg/kg po). Pretreatment of rats with an ineffective blood pressure lowering dose of prazosin (0.03 mg/kg po) significantly attenuated the first dose effect of prazosin, resembling the clinical observations seen in patients. Thus, the SHR may be a useful model for predicting the prazosin-like "first-dose" phenomenon with related analogs.