STEVE TOON' AND MARGHERITA STROLIN-BENEDETTI. ## ABSTRA<JT The effect of food on the pharmacokinetics and tolerability of cabergoline in man was investigated. For this purpose an open, randomized, single-dose study was conducted in 12 healthy male volunteers who received 1 mg cabergoline as table
A review of the pharmacokinetics, tolerability and pharmacodynamics of amisulpride in healthy volunteers
β Scribed by P. Rosenzweig; M. Canal; A. Patat; L. Bergougnan; I. Zieleniuk; G. Bianchetti
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 131 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6222
- DOI
- 10.1002/hup.320
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Amisulpride binds selectively to dopamine D(2) and D(3) receptors in the limbic system. Low doses of amisulpride preferentially block presynaptic D(2)/D(3)-dopamine autoreceptors, thereby enhancing dopaminergic transmission, whereas higher doses block postsynaptic receptors, thus inhibiting dopaminergic hyperactivity. Amisulpride is clinically effective on the negative symptoms of acute schizophrenia exacerbations at low dosages (50-300 mg/day), and also on the positive symptoms of the disease at high dosages (400-800 mg/day). Nineteen clinical studies involving 358 volunteers have investigated the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and tolerability of amisulpride. Amisulpride shows linear pharmacokinetics, a bioavailability of 48%, low protein binding (17%) and an elimination half-life of approximately 12 h. It is predominantly eliminated in the urine as the parent compound. It exhibits no significant detrimental effects in psychometric or memory tests up to the dose of 400 mg/day, inducing only mild impairment at high doses, whereas EEG data suggest an alertness-enhancing effect at low doses (<or= 50 mg). Moreover, amisulpride does not potentiate the depressant effects on the central nervous system of alcohol and lorazepam. This tolerability profile is clearly better than that of haloperidol 4 mg/day and is consistent with a weak blocking effect on striatal D(2) receptors. In summary, studies in humans have shown that amisulpride is free of behavioural toxicity at doses exerting clear antipsychotic efficacy and confirm that its CNS effects may vary with the dose administered.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The objective of this study was to characterize the clinical pharmacokinetic profile of lofexidine after oral delivery. A single dose, cross-over study and a multidose study using healthy volunteers were conducted for that purpose. In the single dose study the average time to maximum concentration w
CardizemOSR and Bi-TildiemO were both approved in their respective countries on the basis of clinical trials demonstrating efficacy and safety in the treatment of angina pectoris. In this cross-over randomized study, we assessed whether these two sustained-release formulations of diltiazem have equi
The pharmacokinetics and tolerability of intravenous (IV) rizatriptan (MK-0462), a novel 5-HT 1D/1B receptor agonist for the acute oral treatment of migraine, were examined in an open, singledose, four-period, randomized crossover study in healthy females. Results of this study indicated that IV riz
When three intravenous doses of lisinopril were administered to healthy volunteers, area under the curve (to infinity) vs dose was linear with a positive intercept. Subtracting area under the extrapolated terminal phase of the serum profile from zero to infinity retained the linear relationship, but