![]() |
|
|
Vol. 281, Issue 2, 876-883, 1997
Novo Nordisk, Health Care Discovery, Malov, Denmark (M.D.B.S.,
M.J.S., P.S., P.O., P.D.S., K.T.H.) and
Lilly Research Laboratories,
Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, Indiana (F.P.B., J.S.W., C.H.M.,
D.O.C., N.W.D., H.E.S.)
Butylthio[2.2.2]
((+)-(S)-3-(4-(Butylthio)-1,2,5-thiadiazol-3-yl)-1-
azabicyclo[2.2.2] octane) is an agonist/antagonist at muscarinic
receptors. The analgesic potential of butylthio[2.2.2] was assessed
in the mouse by use of the grid-shock, tail-flick, hot-plate and
writhing tests. The ED50 values ranged from 0.19 to 1.47 mg/kg and 1.51 to 12.23 mg/kg 30 min after s.c. and p.o. administration, respectively, yielding p.o./s.c. ratios ranging from 7 to 27. The ED50 values for salivation and tremor were >30 and 12.31 mg/kg s.c., and >60 and >60 mg/kg p.o., yielding
therapeutic windows >130 and 54, and, >40 and >40, after s.c. and
p.o. administration, respectively. Motor impairment or lethality were
only seen at doses 116 and 254 times higher than the antinociceptive
doses. Butylthio[2.2.2] was equieffective to, and 3- to 24-fold more potent than morphine. The duration of action was similar to that of
morphine. The dose-response curve was shifted dose dependently to the
right by the muscarinic antagonist scopolamine but not by the opioid
antagonist naltrexone. The antinociceptive effect of butylthio[2.2.2]
was reversed by the centrally acting muscarinic antagonist scopolamine
but not by the peripherally acting muscarinic antagonist
methscopolamine. After 6.5 days repeated dosing in mice, morphine
produced marked tolerance, whereas butylthio[2.2.2] produced minimal,
if any, tolerance. In the rat grid-shock test, ED50 values
of 0.26 mg/kg s.c. and 25.28 mg/kg p.o. were obtained. These data show
that butylthio[2.2.2] is a potent and efficacious antinociceptive
with a very favorable therapeutic window after s.c. and p.o.
administration in mice, and with good efficacy in rats.