Friday, July 2, 2010

It's Like Cocaine, But No Fun

In a very interesting paper, Dutch pharmaceutical company NeuroSearch, in conjunction with Canadian research corporation Kendle Early Stage, report on Subjective and Objective Effects of the Novel Triple Reuptake Inhibitor Tesofensine in Recreational Stimulant Users.

Tesofensine is a drug NeuroSearch are developing for obesity, and they report that it's shown excellent weight-loss-inducing properties in early clinical trials, although of course they would say that. What makes "tes-fens" so interesting is how it works: it's a triple reuptake inhibitor or SNDRI, acting on three neurotransmitters: serotonin, dopamine, and noradrenaline. The only drug of this class in widespread use is, er, cocaine. As you can see, the two drugs are chemically pretty similar.

Experimental SNDRIs are hot right now. It's hoped that they could be effective treatments for obesity, depression, and who knows what else. SNRIs, that inhibit the reuptake of serotonin and noradrenaline but not dopamine, are well known as antidepressants (e.g. venlafaxine aka Effexor) and weight-loss drugs (sibutramine). The thinking goes that if two monoamines are good, three's got to be even better.

But the problem is that drugs that inhibit the reuptake of dopamine are powerful stimulants with the ability to get you as high as a kite. Or to put it technically they "have a strong abuse potential". The best known are amphetamine, methamphetamine, and, yes, cocaine. Here's a Mickey Mouse comic from 1951 showing what amphetamine does...

This is why this new paper is so interesting. The authors gave tesofensine, at a variety of doses, to 52 volunteers, all of whom were recreational users of illegal stimulants: the idea being that such experienced people are best placed to be able to tell you whether a certain drug is an abusable stimulant or not. Which seems like an excellent idea.

What happened? Not much: in the opinion of the expert judges, a single dose of tesofensine at 1, 6 or 9 mg, is a complete washout, man. 1 mg had no noticeable effects at all above placebo. 6 mg and 9 mg did but they were not perceived as enjoyable or as amphetamine-like; if anything, they were slightly unpleasant.

By contrast, the volunteers really liked 30 mg of d-amphetamine - no surprise there - but they did not like the antidepressant bupropion, or the ADHD drug atomoxetine. Everything was double-blind, by the way, and the fact that there was not one but three comparator drugs, as well as inert placebo, means that this study will have avoided active placebo effects.

No serious adverse events occurred, but the higher doses of tesofensine raised blood pressure and caused insomnia. Bear in mind that for obesity the lowest dose 1 mg is looking to be the most promising and this dose didn't cause many side effects. Overall, these results seem pretty convincing: tesofensine is no fun.

Why not, given that it's so similar to cocaine? The answer is almost certainly that it's just too slow. After taking it orally, it takes 5 to 8 h for blood levels to peak, and it persists in the body for weeks (halflife of ~220 h.) With cocaine, if you snort it, peak blood levels are achieved in minutes and the halflife is less than one hour.

In general, the faster a drug gets into the blood the more pleasurable it is: this is why people tend to snort, smoke, and inject recreational drugs, rather than swallowing them. Crack is the same drug as normal cocaine, but it can be smoked, which is even faster than snorting. Compared to drugs of abuse tesofensine is ridiculously slow to enter and leave the body.

But this does raise the question of whether, with repeated use, levels might build up and produce effects very different to those seen in this study, which only used a single dose. It has a half-life of 220 hours which means that 9 days after you take some, half of it is still in your bloodstream! In the obesity trials, it was given at a dose of up to 1 mg per day. This is unlikely to give it an abuse potential per se but it could cause a lot of side effects down the line. We'll just have to wait and see...

ResearchBlogging.orgSchoedel, K., Meier, D., Chakraborty, B., Manniche, P., & Sellers, E. (2010). Subjective and Objective Effects of the Novel Triple Reuptake Inhibitor Tesofensine in Recreational Stimulant Users Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 88 (1), 69-78 DOI: 10.1038/clpt.2010.67

It's Like Cocaine, But No Fun

In a very interesting paper, Dutch pharmaceutical company NeuroSearch, in conjunction with Canadian research corporation Kendle Early Stage, report on Subjective and Objective Effects of the Novel Triple Reuptake Inhibitor Tesofensine in Recreational Stimulant Users.

Tesofensine is a drug NeuroSearch are developing for obesity, and they report that it's shown excellent weight-loss-inducing properties in early clinical trials, although of course they would say that. What makes "tes-fens" so interesting is how it works: it's a triple reuptake inhibitor or SNDRI, acting on three neurotransmitters: serotonin, dopamine, and noradrenaline. The only drug of this class in widespread use is, er, cocaine. As you can see, the two drugs are chemically pretty similar.

Experimental SNDRIs are hot right now. It's hoped that they could be effective treatments for obesity, depression, and who knows what else. SNRIs, that inhibit the reuptake of serotonin and noradrenaline but not dopamine, are well known as antidepressants (e.g. venlafaxine aka Effexor) and weight-loss drugs (sibutramine). The thinking goes that if two monoamines are good, three's got to be even better.

But the problem is that drugs that inhibit the reuptake of dopamine are powerful stimulants with the ability to get you as high as a kite. Or to put it technically they "have a strong abuse potential". The best known are amphetamine, methamphetamine, and, yes, cocaine. Here's a Mickey Mouse comic from 1951 showing what amphetamine does...

This is why this new paper is so interesting. The authors gave tesofensine, at a variety of doses, to 52 volunteers, all of whom were recreational users of illegal stimulants: the idea being that such experienced people are best placed to be able to tell you whether a certain drug is an abusable stimulant or not. Which seems like an excellent idea.

What happened? Not much: in the opinion of the expert judges, a single dose of tesofensine at 1, 6 or 9 mg, is a complete washout, man. 1 mg had no noticeable effects at all above placebo. 6 mg and 9 mg did but they were not perceived as enjoyable or as amphetamine-like; if anything, they were slightly unpleasant.

By contrast, the volunteers really liked 30 mg of d-amphetamine - no surprise there - but they did not like the antidepressant bupropion, or the ADHD drug atomoxetine. Everything was double-blind, by the way, and the fact that there was not one but three comparator drugs, as well as inert placebo, means that this study will have avoided active placebo effects.

No serious adverse events occurred, but the higher doses of tesofensine raised blood pressure and caused insomnia. Bear in mind that for obesity the lowest dose 1 mg is looking to be the most promising and this dose didn't cause many side effects. Overall, these results seem pretty convincing: tesofensine is no fun.

Why not, given that it's so similar to cocaine? The answer is almost certainly that it's just too slow. After taking it orally, it takes 5 to 8 h for blood levels to peak, and it persists in the body for weeks (halflife of ~220 h.) With cocaine, if you snort it, peak blood levels are achieved in minutes and the halflife is less than one hour.

In general, the faster a drug gets into the blood the more pleasurable it is: this is why people tend to snort, smoke, and inject recreational drugs, rather than swallowing them. Crack is the same drug as normal cocaine, but it can be smoked, which is even faster than snorting. Compared to drugs of abuse tesofensine is ridiculously slow to enter and leave the body.

But this does raise the question of whether, with repeated use, levels might build up and produce effects very different to those seen in this study, which only used a single dose. It has a half-life of 220 hours which means that 9 days after you take some, half of it is still in your bloodstream! In the obesity trials, it was given at a dose of up to 1 mg per day. This is unlikely to give it an abuse potential per se but it could cause a lot of side effects down the line. We'll just have to wait and see...

ResearchBlogging.orgSchoedel, K., Meier, D., Chakraborty, B., Manniche, P., & Sellers, E. (2010). Subjective and Objective Effects of the Novel Triple Reuptake Inhibitor Tesofensine in Recreational Stimulant Users Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 88 (1), 69-78 DOI: 10.1038/clpt.2010.67

TROFÉU OURO!!!

HOJE TEM BRASIL!!!!!
INFELIZMENTE, NAO FOI DESSA VEZ.
AGORA É SÓ ESPERAR 2014....


Recados para Orkut  de Brasileiras

Um lindo e belo presente de uma pessoa muito maravilhosa: Valeria C do blog. http://docefilosofia.blogspot.com/





Quero agradecer de coração a minha querida amiga Valeria C. do blog
http://docefilosofia.blogspot.com/

A regra é oferecer a 15 blogueiras:

Como vocês já sabem, todos meus amigos e amigas que me seguem são muito especiais
e sinceramente prefiro não escolher apenas quinze...

Este troféu é de todos vocês...levem... e quanto a regrinha...
cada um escolhe
o que fazer...

como regra, quero registrar que:
A GRANDE AMIZADE SÓ PODE SER CONSTRUÍDA, SE VOCÊ AJUDAR CIMENTAR AS PAREDES.

ESTA É A MINHA CONTRIBUIÇÃO NA REGRA.
AGORA, SE VOCÊ DESEJAR CONTINUA COM A FRASE, QUEM SABE CONSTRUIREMOS UM GRANDE TEXTO SOBRE A AMIZADE VIRTUAL.
DEIXE A SEQUÊNCIA NO COMENTÁRIO E EM SEU BLOG...
QUE TAL..VOCÊ TOPA??

Um beijo carinhoso a todos vocês!!!
Obrigada por fazerem parte da minha vida!!!

NÃO DEIXE CONFERI... COMPARTILHE ..



MEUS MIMOS
OFERECIDOS/RECEBIDOS.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Fef6 3- Splitting Diagram

Felicidades Ella Bocrate

second consecutive year celebrate birthday Pinchudos our friend.

She bristles Chilean-Algerian, was born on July 1, 2008 and was adopted by Clau, Interlaken, Chile. Part of the Troop Bocrate, name that corresponds to the initials of the seven members pets: Boina, Polar Bear, Coral, Recx, Ange, Truffle (his sister bristles) and Ella.


Pictured Truffle She and her sister during one of her regular baths.
Bocrate
Photo

can visit this family so special in the flog BOCRATE Troop.

CONGRATULATIONS ELLA!

Denise Milani Sea World

Gato Ulises cumple 19 años

Today is a very special day for the cat Ulysses, celebrated his nineteenth birthday.


Photo: JL Mon

Tonkin Ulysses is a cat born on July 1, 1991 and adopted by JlMon .

Ulysses, by its longevity, is the mascot of honor in our Pet Agenda.




CONGRATULATIONS ULYSSES,
FAMILY CONGRATULATIONS!

OLA MEUS DOCES AMIGOS!!!


luto.bmp




HOJE VENHO RAPIDINHO AQUI PARA AGRADECER A TODOS.

ESTOU MUITO TRISTE COM A MORTE DO EX ALUNO DA ESCOLA, O FATO OCORREU NA NOITE DE TERÇA FEIRA POR VOLTA DAS 20 H 30 M ATÉ AS 21 HORAS. O GAROTO TINHA 17 ANOS E FOI ATACADO COM 14 FACADAS. ESTOU MUITO CHOCADA. NÃO CONSEGUI ESQUECER AQUELE MENINO ALI, ESTICADO NO CHÃO SE ESVAINDO EM SANGUE.
MUITO TRISTE. MORREU PEDINDO PARA NÃO SER MORTE. ISSO AINDA ESTÁ MUITO PRESENTE, EM MINHA MENTE E CORAÇÃO.
NÃO CONSIGO PENSAR EM OUTRA COISA.
SÃO CENAS QUE ABALOU O BAIRRO TODO. NUNCA HAVIA OCORRIDO ISSO.
INFELIZMENTE AS DROGAS FAZEM COISAS, QUE NÃO CONSEGUIMOS COMPREENDER.

MORREU POR CAUSA DE UMA BICICLETA QUE PEGOU E NÃO DEVOLVEU.
UMA VERDADEIRA TRAGÉDIA.
PEÇO DESCULPAS POR NÃO TER AINDA VISITADO NINGUÉM. MAS MEU CORAÇÃO ESTÁ DE LUTO EM FUNÇÃO DA MORTE DELE.
ELE ESTUDOU COM O MEU FILHO..DEI AULA PARA ELE. ERA UM JOVEM COM UMA VIDA INTEIRA PELA FRENTE.
COMO ENTENDER ESSES DESIGNO DA VIDA...
É O TAL DA COISA. OU A DROGA MATA..OU ELE É MORTO POR ALGUÉM...
TRISTE FIM PARA UM ADOLESCENTE DE 17 ANOS!!!!!!

TRISTE FAMILIA QUE PERDEU SEU FILHO..É DESOLADOR!!!!!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

The Fall of Freud

The works of Sigmund Freud were enormously influential in 20th century psychiatry, but they've now been reduced to little more than a fringe belief system. Armed with the latest version of my PubMed history script, and inspired by this classic gnxp post on the death of Marxism, postmodernism, and other stupid academic fads I decided to see how this happened.

As you can see, the number of published scientific papers related to Freud-y search terms like psychoanalytic has flat-lined for the past 50 years. That represents a serious collapse of influence, given the enormous expansion in the amount of research being published over this time.

Since 1960 the number of papers on schizophrenia has risen by a factor of 10 and anxiety by a factor of 80 (sic). The peak of Freud's fame was 1968, when almost as many papers referenced psychoanalytic (721) as did schizophrenia (989), and it was more than half as popular as antidepressants (1372). Today it's just 10% of either. Proportionally speaking, psychoanalysis has gone out with a whimper, though not a bang.

The rise of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), however, is even more dramatic. From being almost unheard until the late 80's, it overtook psychoanalytic in 1993, and it's now more popular than antipsychotics and close on the heels of antidepressants.

What's going to happen in the future? If there is to be a struggle for influence it looks set to be fought between CBT and biological psychiatry, if only because they're pretty much the only games left in town. Yet one of the reasons behind CBT's widespread appeal is that it hasn't thus far overtly challenged biology, has adopted the methods of medicine (clinical trials etc.), and has presented itself as being useful as well as medication rather than instead of it.

One of the few exceptions was Richard Bentall's book Madness Explained (2003) in which he criticized psychiatry and presented a cognitive-behavioural alternative to orthodox biological theories of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Bentall remains on the radical wing of the CBT community but in the coming decades this kind of thing may become more common. Only time will tell...