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Browsing by Subject "amphetamines"

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    Circadian variability of body temperature responses to Methamphetamine (Meth)
    (Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, 2015-04-17) Behrouzvaziri, Abolhassan; Yoo, Yeonjoo; Morozova, Ekaterina; Zaretskaia, Maria; Zaretsky, Dmitry; Molkov, Yaroslav
    Vital parameters of living organisms exhibit circadian rhythmicity. Despite rats are nocturnal animals, most of drugs of abuse studies in rodents are performed during the day. Virtually no data on circadian variability of responses to amphetamines is currently available. However, the amplitude of circadian variations of body temperature is comparable to the magnitude of temperature responses to Meth. Accordingly, one can expect that the responses may be qualitatively different during the day and at night. Experiments were performed on male Sprague-Dawley rats implanted with telemetric probes reporting body temperature. Rats received i.p. injections of Meth (1 or 5 mg/kg) or saline at 10-11am or at 10-11pm. Each rat received only one injection of Meth to avoid the effects of repeated administration. The responses were recorded for at least 5 h. The baseline body temperature at night was 0.8ºC higher than during the day. The body temperature increased after injections of saline during both day and night but returned to its baseline within 1 h. This response was developing faster, and more pronounced at night. The temperature responses to Meth were different during the day and at night. In both cases the lower dose of Meth (1 mg/kg) induced monophasic hyperthermia. However, the maximal deviation of the temperature from baseline was appr. twice smaller at night than during the day. Injection of the higher dose of Meth (5 mg/kg) at day time caused a delayed hyperthermic response, preceded by a slight increase of the body temperature immediately after injection. In contrast, at night the same dose produced immediate hypothermia, which was not observed during the day. Recently, we created a model which showed that the complex dose-dependence of day-time temperature responses to Meth results from the delicate balance between inhibitory and excitatory drives which have different sensitivity to the drug. To interpret the night time data, we extended this mathematical model by assuming that the excitatory and/or inhibitory components and general metabolism are affected by the circadian input. Our model revealed that during the night the baseline activity of the excitatory node is greater than during the day. Besides, after injection of either dose of Meth the equilibrium body temperature appears significantly lower than the temperature observed before injection. The suppression of the response to the lower dose of Meth is, therefore, explained by a combination of two factors. First, the excitatory drive, which is predominantly responsible for monophasic hyperthermia after low doses of Meth, gets partially saturated. Second, the reduced general metabolism, which underlies the lower equilibrium temperature, leads to gradual cooling thus limiting the hyperthermia. Same mechanisms mediate the observed hypothermia during the night after the higher dose of Meth, as the inhibitory drive starts dominating the excitatory one. The reduction of the equilibrium temperature after Meth injection during the active time period represents a major perturbation of the thermoregulatory system status, and may reflect a Meth-triggered disturbance of circadian rhythmicity.
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    Differentiation of Structurally Similar Phenethylamines via Gas Chromatography - Vacuum Ultraviolet Spectroscopy (GC – VUV)
    (Elsevier, 2019-08) Roberson, Zackery R.; Goodpaster, John V.; Chemistry and Chemical Biology, School of Science
    The vacuum ultraviolet region includes wavelengths shorter than 200 nm. Electronic transitions of sigma and pi bonds lie in this region, which have the potential to yield structural information. Thus, a VUV detector should be able to detect nearly any molecule analyzable by gas chromatography. This study sought to determine the extent to which structurally similar phenethylamines are differentiated using their VUV spectra. Phenethylamines are a common drug class including pseudoephedrine and illicit drugs such as methamphetamine. Several phenethylamines are difficult to analyze by electron impact mass spectrometry due to their fragmentation giving the same mass to charge ratio fragments at similar ratios. While phenethylamines are generally differentiable by retention time, an extra layer of specificity is preferred in forensic analyses. A vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) spectrophotometer coupled to a gas chromatograph was used to collect VUV spectra at high frequency between 125 and 430 nm. Eight phenethylamines were analyzed for this work using GC/VUV. A calibration curve and limit of detection study was performed that indicates a limit of detection around 10 μg mL−1 and an upper limit of linearity around 1000 μg mL−1. The spectra, analyzed by Principal Component Analysis and Discriminant Analysis, indicate the ability to reliably differentiate each of the drugs from one another including structural isomers and diastereomers. Lastly, five “street” samples containing amphetamines were analyzed to demonstrate “real world” performance.
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    Meth math: modeling temperature responses to methamphetamine
    (American Physiological Society (APS), 2014-04-15) Molkov, Yaroslav I.; Zaretskaia, Maria V.; Zaretsky, Dmitry V.; Department of Emergency Medicine, IU School of Medicine
    Methamphetamine (Meth) can evoke extreme hyperthermia, which correlates with neurotoxicity and death in laboratory animals and humans. The objective of this study was to uncover the mechanisms of a complex dose dependence of temperature responses to Meth by mathematical modeling of the neuronal circuitry. On the basis of previous studies, we composed an artificial neural network with the core comprising three sequentially connected nodes: excitatory, medullary, and sympathetic preganglionic neuronal (SPN). Meth directly stimulated the excitatory node, an inhibitory drive targeted the medullary node, and, in high doses, an additional excitatory drive affected the SPN node. All model parameters (weights of connections, sensitivities, and time constants) were subject to fitting experimental time series of temperature responses to 1, 3, 5, and 10 mg/kg Meth. Modeling suggested that the temperature response to the lowest dose of Meth, which caused an immediate and short hyperthermia, involves neuronal excitation at a supramedullary level. The delay in response after the intermediate doses of Meth is a result of neuronal inhibition at the medullary level. Finally, the rapid and robust increase in body temperature induced by the highest dose of Meth involves activation of high-dose excitatory drive. The impairment in the inhibitory mechanism can provoke a life-threatening temperature rise and makes it a plausible cause of fatal hyperthermia in Meth users. We expect that studying putative neuronal sites of Meth action and the neuromediators involved in a detailed model of this system may lead to more effective strategies for prevention and treatment of hyperthermia induced by amphetamine-like stimulants.
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