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Vol. 281, Issue 3, 1487-1498, 1997
Unit on Anxiety Disorders, Biological Psychiatry Branch, National
Institute of Mental Health, NIH, Bethesda, MD (U.D.M.);
Department of
Neurology, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD (J.Y.,
G.H., G.A.R.)
Fenfluramine, a clinically prescribed appetite suppressant, has been
found to damage brain serotonin (5-HT) neurons in every animal species
tested to date. Recent findings indicate that fluoxetine, a selective
5-HT reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), can prevent fenfluramine-induced 5-HT
neurotoxicity without blocking fenfluramine-induced appetite suppression. The purpose of our studies was several-fold: 1) To determine whether the ability for fluoxetine to dissociate
fenfluramine-induced anorexia and neurotoxicity is dose-related; 2) to
ascertain whether other SSRIs also prevent fenfluramine-induced
neurotoxicity without altering its anorectic effect; 3) to determine
whether similar fluoxetine/fenfluramine interactions are seen in
another animal species (i.e., mice) and 4) to determine
whether decreases in food intake seen after the fluoxetine/fenfluramine
combination can be attributed to nonspecific behavioral suppression.
Results from our studies indicate that fluoxetine's effects are,
indeed, dose-related, because higher doses of fluoxetine are required to protect against the 5-HT neurotoxic effects of higher doses of
fenfluramine. Further, our results indicate that fluoxetine's effects
generalize to all other SSRIs tested (citalopram, paroxetine and
sertraline), as well as to other species (mice). Finally, our results
demonstrate that anorexia in animals receiving the fenfluramine/fluoxetine combination is not secondary to nonspecific behavioral suppression, because water intake is increased although food
intake is decreased in the same animals. Together, these data suggest
that the anorectic and 5-HT neurotoxic effects of fenfluramine may
involve different mechanisms, and that by combining fenfluramine with
SSRIs, it may be possible to exploit fenfluramine's clinically useful
properties (e.g., anorexia) without risking brain 5-HT
neural injury.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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J J G Hillebrand, A C M Heinsbroek, M J H Kas, and R A H Adan The appetite suppressant d-fenfluramine reduces water intake, but not food intake, in activity-based anorexia J. Mol. Endocrinol., February 1, 2006; 36(1): 153 - 162. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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