Division of Neurotoxicology (P.C., G.D.N., J.F.B.), National Center
for Toxicological Research, Jefferson, Arkansas and
Scantox Biological
Laboratories (P.C.), 4623 Lille Skendsved, Denmark
The relationship between dose, frontal cortex (brain) microdialysate
and brain tissue levels of fenfluramine (FEN) and norfenfluramine (NF),
as well as the effect that these levels have on body temperature, was
determined after systemic d-FEN. FEN and NF levels were
monitored continuously in the microdialysate of adult male
Sprague-Dawley rats dosed with 3 × 5 mg/kg s.c. (spaced 2 hr
apart), 1 × 2 mg/kg s.c. or 1 × 10 mg/kg i.p.
d-FEN (at ambient temperatures of either 23°C or
27°C). Drug concentrations in plasma and brain regions were also
determined 1 hr after one or three doses of 5 mg/kg of
d-FEN and 1 and 8 hr after 10 mg/kg
d-FEN, and the levels of 5-hydroxytryptamine and
5-hydroxyindole acetic acid in the frontal cortex of FEN and controls
were determined 4 days after dosing. Peak microdialysate FEN levels,
occurring between 40 and 60 min after the first dose, were 0.24 ± 0.07 µM after 2 mg/kg, 0.33 ± 0.04 µM after 5 mg/kg and 1.65 µM after 10 mg/kg. After multiple doses of 5 mg/kg FEN the
time-to-peak level was greater than 80 min with peaks of 0.68 ± 0.04 µM after the second dose and 1.20 ± 0.07 µM after the
third dose. There was a positive correlation between combined (FEN + NF) peak levels in microdialysate and the increase in body temperature
after 10 mg/kg d-FEN at 27°C; however, the group mean
and peak levels of FEN and NF in microdialysate were statistically the
same at either 23°C or 27°C. The indole-depleting effect of
d-FEN at 4 days after dosing was exacerbated at 27°C when hyperthermia occurred. Thus, hyperthermia does not affect the
pharmacokinetics of d-FEN but pharmacokinetics can
influence the degree of hyperthermia in a 27°C environment. Plasma
levels, brain extracellular and brain levels of approximately 1 µM,
2.5 µM and 50 µM FEN (respectively), or greater, result from
5-hydroxytryptamine-depleting doses of 5 mg/kg s.c. FEN.
 |
Introduction |
d-Fenfluramine,
an anorectic drug commonly prescribed to treat obesity in Europe, can
increase extracellular 5-HT in the hypothalamus (Schwartz et
al., 1989
), cortex (Series et al., 1994
) and striatum (Kreiss et al., 1993
) of rodents. With repeated doses it can
also evoke prolonged depletion of 5-HT in the brain regions rich in serotonergic nerve endings (Harvey and McMaster, 1975
; Clineschmidt et al., 1976
, 1978
). It has been suggested that 5-HT release
without compensatory replenishment of the storage vesicles is largely responsible for the observed decrease in 5-HT tissue concentrations (see Rowland and Carlton, 1986
, for review). d-FEN can act
as a 5-HT re-uptake inhibitor (Wong et al., 1975
; McTavish
and Heel, 1992
) and releaser (Fuller et al., 1988
), and its
major metabolite d-NF has been reported to act as a 5-HT
releaser (Garattini, 1985
).
Recently, information about drug concentrations at their target site
(extracellular space) has been determined by brain microdialysis (Ståhle, 1991
; Allen et al., 1994
; Alonso et
al., 1995
; Clausing et al., 1995
). Such data are useful
for several purposes. First, they can help to compare results of
in vitro studies (Kramer et al., 1994
) with the
in vivo situation. Second, such data can facilitate the
understanding of the temporal features of drug-induced neurotransmitter and behavioral changes in a dose-response-context (Segal and Kuczenski, 1994
), in particular when extracellular drug levels, neurochemical and
behavioral changes are determined simultaneously (Bradberry et
al., 1993
; Clausing et al., 1996
). Third, the
simultaneous determination of drug levels, neurochemical and behavioral
changes enables one to elucidate to what extent individual differences in drug response are caused by pharmacodynamics (Hooks et
al., 1992
) versus pharmacokinetic mechanisms (Clausing
et al., 1996
). Finally, the evaluation of relative drug
potencies in an in vivo situation ultimately requires
knowledge of the drug concentration at the target site (Bradberry
et al., 1993
).
To further the understanding of the central effects of
d-FEN, this study provides data on the levels of FEN and NF
in microdialysate collected from the frontal cortex after either
subcutaneous or intraperitoneal administration of different doses of
d-FEN. For the purpose of comparison, plasma and brain
tissue levels were also determined as well as brain 5-HT concentrations
4 days after dosing. The frontal cortex was chosen for these
microdialysis studies because it is one of the areas more sensitive to
both methylenedioxymethamphetamine and d-FEN (Slikker
et al., 1988
; Stewart et al., 1997
).
 |
Methods |
Animal housing and experimental design.
All procedures
involving animal care were approved by the National Center for
Toxicological Research Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats (Crl:COBS CD [SD] BR), 4 to 5 months old,
from the National Center for Toxicological Research breeding colony
were housed individually, starting on the day of implantation of the
microdialysis guide cannula. They were kept in acrylic cages (45 × 22 × 20 cm) on wood shaving bedding. d-FEN was
purchased from Research Biochemicals International (Natick, MA) and the
d-NF, which was used as a reference standard for HPLC analysis, was a gift from S.A. Lorens (Loyola University, Maywood, IL).
All but one experiment was carried out at a standardized room
temperature of 23 ± 1°C. To collect brain microdialysates the
animals were transferred into the microdialysis bowl 4 hr before
administration of d-FEN. A single subcutaneous injection of
2 mg/kg d-FEN was administered to determine what the FEN
levels in the microdialysis were over time from a dose which produces minimal to no 5-HT depletion. Three subcutaneous doses of 5 mg/kg d-FEN spaced 2 hr apart were used to enable a direct
comparison of FEN-dialysate levels with a previously published similar
study with d-amphetamine using the same dosing paradigm
(Clausing et al., 1995
). Plasma and whole-brain FEN and NF
levels were determined in animals (not used for microdialysis) after
either 1 × 5 mg/kg s.c. d-FEN or 3 × 5 mg/kg
s.c. d-FEN, so that levels in these tissue could be compared
with the microdialysis data gathered from 3 × 5 mg/kg s.c.
d-FEN. Finally, the time course of FEN and NF dialysate
levels was monitored for 8 hr after a single i.p. injection of 10 mg/kg
d-FEN, a dose typically used in neurotransmitter microdialysis studies (Schwartz et al., 1989
; Hirano
et al., 1995
; Viana et al., 1996
). This latter
experiment was conducted at two different ambient temperatures (23 ± 0.5°C vs. 27 ± 0.5°C). During this experiment
rectal temperatures were recorded every 60 min, as described previously
by Bowyer et al. (1994)
, and when body temperature exceeded
41.0°C ice was placed in the microdialysis bowel to cool the animals
to below 40.0°C. The 5-HT tissue concentrations of frontal cortex
were determined 4 days after dosing. This cooling affected the time
versus temperature profile; to better visualize the time
course of hyperthermia produced in a 27°C environment an additional
group profile of nonimplanted rats receiving 10 mg/kg i.p.
d-FEN, whose temperature did not exceed 41.0°C, is shown
in figure 2B. Also, nonimplanted rats were dosed with 10 mg/kg i.p.
d-FEN at either 23°C or 27°C, and were sacrificed either 1 or 8 hr after dosing to determine plasma and brain concentrations of
FEN and NF at these time points. An overview of the total experimental design is presented in table 1.
Brain microdialysis.
Brain microdialysis was carried out in
a manner as described by Ungerstedt (1984)
and modified by this
laboratory. CMA microdialysis equipment (Carnegie Medicine, Stockholm,
Sweden) was used and CMA/12 guide cannulae were implanted with the
coordinates AP 3.5 mm, LAT 1.3 mm, DV 3.6 mm relative to bregma
(Paxinos and Watson, 1986
). The artificial cerebrospinal fluid had the
following composition: 145 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM KCl, 1.5 mM
MgCl2·6H2O, 1.25 mM
CaCl2·2H2O, 10 mM
glucose, 1.5 mM K2HPO4,
adjusted to pH 7.0 with HCl. After surgery the animals were given a 5- to 7-day recovery period. On the morning of the experiment the animal
was hand-held and the CMA/12 dialysis probe (2-mm probe tip) was
carefully inserted through the guide cannula into the frontal cortex.
Four hours after probe insertion the first d-FEN dose was
administered, and (after allowing for the dead volume in the tubing)
microdialysis samples were collected every 20 min at a flow rate of 1 µl/min. After the microdialysis experiment, rats were sacrificed for
histological verification of the probe position. In vitro
probe recovery was measured to assess the functionality of the
individual probes and to exclude nonfunctional probes from the
experiment. Percent in vitro probe recovery for FEN and NF
was determined as [(concentration in collected sample × 100)/concentration in standard solution] at 23°C and 1 µl/min flow
rate. The estimated average in vitro probe recoveries for
FEN and NF of 21 probes used were 23 ± 1.6% for FEN and 25 ± 1.7% for NF.
Collection of plasma and brain samples.
For the collection
of plasma and brain samples, rats were decapitated and trunk blood was
collected into glass tubes containing heparin. Blood samples were
centrifuged under refrigeration for 10 min at 18,000 × g. Brains were dissected quickly on a chilled glass plate.
Frontal cortex, hypothalamus, caudate/putamen and substantia nigra were
collected into separate tubes. Some extra samples of untreated animals
were collected for running blanks and standards during the HPLC
analysis. All samples were stored at
150°C until analysis.
HPLC quantitation of FEN and NF.
A detailed description of
the HPLC method can be found elsewhere (Clausing et al.,
1997
). Because this method does not distinguish between l-
and d-enantiomers we refer to FEN and NF levels in this
paper rather than d-FEN and d-NF levels, although
it is reasonable to assume these enantiomers do not rapidly racemize
after administration of d-FEN. FEN and NF levels were
determined by fluorescent detection after derivatization with dansyl
chloride, removal of excess dansyl chloride with a strong
anion-exchange resin and separation on a Supelcosil LC-18 column,
running a step gradient with 50%
KH2PO4 (0.05 M, pH 5.5) + 50% acetonitrile (mobile phase A) versus 25% KH2PO4 (0.05 M, pH 5.5) + 75% acetonitrile (mobile phase B). Microdialysate samples were
derivatized directly, whereas plasma and brain samples were extracted
into ethyl acetate under basic conditions and reconstituted in
KH2PO4 buffer (adjusted to
pH 2.8) before derivatization. The quantitation limits of this method
were 500 fmol in microdialysate, 5 pmol in extracted plasma and 25 pmol
in extracted brain tissue. Fluoxetine from Ely Lilly (Indianapolis, IN)
was used as internal standard for the analysis of brain tissue and
plasma samples.
HPLC quantitation of 5-HT.
5-HT levels in brain tissue were
analyzed by electrochemical detection. Each sample was weighed and
diluted with a measured volume (20 × w/v) of 0.2 M perchloric acid
containing 100 ng/ml 3,4-dihydroxybenzylamine (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) as
internal standard. After sonication and centrifugation the supernatant
was removed and injected directly onto the HPLC/electrochemical
detection system. Samples were analyzed under the following conditions: An isocratic M-6000A pump (Waters Associates, Milford, MA) at a 1.0 ml/min flow rate, a Rheodyne 7125 injector (Rheodyne Inc., Cotati,
CA.), a Supelcosil LC18 3 µm analytical column (7.5 cm × 4.6 mm, Supelco, Bellefonte, PA), a BAS-LC4B amperometric detector, a
BAS-LC-17 oxidative flow cell and an LCI-100 integrator (Perkin Elmer
Corp., Cupertino, CA) were used. The mobile phase consisted of 92%
KH2PO4 buffer (0.07 M, pH
3.0) and 8% methanol, containing 1 mM Na-1-heptanesulfonic acid and
0.2 mM Na2-ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid per
liter unless otherwise indicated.
Statistics.
Data are presented as arithmetic mean ± standard error of the mean (S.E.M.) unless otherwise indicated.
Student's t test was used for two-sample comparisons.
Multiple groups were analyzed by one-way ANOVA with post hoc
Fisher's least significant difference test, if significant main
effects were observed. Linear correlation and regression analysis was
used to examine the relationship between hyperthermia and 5-HT tissue
or drug microdialysis concentrations. Areas under the
time-concentration curve (AUC) were calculated applying the trapezoidal
rule with the computer program of Tallarida and Murray (1986)
.
 |
Results |
Levels of FEN and NF in microdialysate.
Microdialysate levels
of FEN and NF after systemic administration of d-FEN are
depicted in figs. 1 and
2. After 2 mg/kg d-FEN s.c.
the peak concentration was 0.24 ± 0.07 µM between 40 and 60 min
and declined to below detectable levels 4 hr after dosing (fig. 1).
However, the difference between the 0- to 20-min fraction and the third
fraction did not quite reach statistical significance (P > .05).
Administration of 3 × 5 mg/kg d-FEN, spaced 2 hr
apart, caused a continuous build-up of FEN throughout the dosing.
Although peak levels of 0.33 ± 0.04 µM were reached within 40 to 60 min after the first dose, after multiple doses of 5 mg/kg FEN the time-to-peak level was greater than 80 min with peaks of 0.68 ± 0.04 µM after the second dose and 1.20 ± .07 µM after the
third dose. One-way ANOVA revealed significant differences among the FEN concentrations of the different microdialysate fractions
(F20,126 = 60.74, P < .001). The
subsequent Neuman-Keuls test indicates that, compared with the first
fraction (0-20 min), levels of the third (40-60 min) fraction and all
following fractions were significantly higher (P < .05), whereas
there was no difference between the third and sixth fraction. FEN
levels were still at plateau levels 3 hr after the last dose. Peak
levels as well as the time course (fig. 2) were almost identical when
d-FEN (1 × 10 mg/kg i.p.) was administered at two
different ambient temperatures. Peak FEN levels of 1.63 ± 0.28 µM and 1.54 ± 0.20 µM were reached between 40 and 60 min at
23°C and 27°C room temperature, respectively. One-way ANOVA
indicated significant differences in FEN concentration between
individual microdialysis fractions at 23°C
(F23,120 = 6.18, P < .0001) and
27°C (F23,120 = 8.85, P < .0001). A
subsequent Newman-Keuls test revealed that the FEN concentration in the
0- to 20-min microdialysate fraction was significantly lower (P < .01) than in the subsequent six fractions, whereas the subsequent six
fractions did not significantly (P > .05) differ from each other.
Table 2 summarizes the analysis of these
data calculated as the area under the concentration versus
time curve (AUC). No significant differences were observed. These data
indicate that after a single systemic administration of
d-FEN microdialysis FEN levels reach their maximum 40 and 60 min after dosing irrespective of the dose given.

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Fig. 1.
FEN (open symbols) and NF (filled symbols)
concentrations in microdialysate collected from the frontal cortex (not
corrected for probe recovery) after either one dose of 2 mg/kg s.c.
d-FEN or three doses of 5 mg/kg s.c.
d-FEN. Results are the mean ± S.E.M. for five (2 mg/kg group) or six rats (3 × 5 mg/kg group).
|
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Fig. 2.
FEN and NF concentrations in microdialysate
collected from the frontal cortex (A) or body temperature (B) after a
single dose of 10 mg/kg i.p. d-FEN. Results are the
mean ± S.E.M. for five rats per group for the microdialysis rats.
(a) The mean temperature at this time point dropped abruptly because
four rats were placed on ice because their body temperature exceeded
41.0°C. A separate group of nonmicrodialysis rats are shown (filled
triangles) to show the true profile of the temperature increases in a
27°C environment after 10 mg/kg i.p. d-FEN.
|
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TABLE 2
Area under the time versus concentration curves for frontal
cortex microdialysate levels of FEN and NF (mean ± S.E.M.) after 10 mg/kg d-FEN administered at two different ambient
temperatures
One-way ANOVA revealed no significant differences between 23°C and
27°C room temperatures.
|
|
Levels of FEN and NF in plasma and brain tissue.
Results for
plasma and tissue concentrations of FEN and NF are summarized in table
3. After 1 × 10 mg/kg
d-FEN i.p., FEN concentrations were significantly lower in
all substrates 8 hr after dosing as compared with 1 hr after dosing. In
contrast, NF concentrations 8 hr after dosing were significantly higher than 1 hr after dosing. As compared with a single dose, three s.c.
doses of 5 mg/kg d-FEN spaced 2 hr apart resulted in
significantly higher levels of both FEN and NF in all the substrates
investigated. Regional differences were observed for both FEN and NF.
After 1 × 10 mg/kg i.p. d-FEN, concentrations were
significantly lower in hypothalamus as compared with striatum and/or
frontal cortex 1 hr after dosing. At 8 hr after dosing, concentrations
of FEN and NF in the frontal cortex and striatum tended to be higher than in hypothalamus and substantia nigra. This must be considered with
caution, however, because the routes of administration were different,
and the pharmacokinetics of fenfluramine has been shown to be complex
after multiple administrations at varying doses (Caccia et
al., 1992
).
Tissue concentrations of 5-HT and 5-HIAA in the frontal
cortex.
Compared with controls, rats receiving 1 × 10 mg/kg
d-FEN i.p. had significantly lower concentrations of 5-HT
and 5-HIAA 4 days after dosing (fig. 3).
After administration of d-FEN at a 23°C room temperature,
5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations were 36% and 61% of the corresponding
controls, respectively. When rats were kept at 27°C ambient
temperature for 8 hr after dosing, levels dropped to 13% and 17% of
the corresponding controls for 5-HT and 5-HIAA, respectively, which
were significantly lower than those levels in rats dosed with
d-FEN at 23°C (fig. 3). There was a significant negative
correlation (r =
0.900, P = .003) for rats dosed
with d-FEN between either peak body temperature or increase
in temperature above the animals' base-line temperatures just before
dosing during the session and the 5-HT concentration in the frontal
cortex 4 days after dosing (fig. 4).

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Fig. 3.
Tissue concentrations of 5-HT (A) and 5-HIAA (B) in
the frontal cortex of rats 4 days after the administration of a single i.p. dose of 10 mg/kg d-FEN hydrochloride either at
23°C or at 27°C room temperature. Results are the mean ± S.E.M. of four or five rats per group. a = significantly different
(P < .05) from controls at the same room temperature; b = significantly different (P < .05) from FEN-dosed rats at 23°C.
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Fig. 4.
The relationship between the increase in body
temperature from base line (A) or peak body temperature (B) and 5-HT
concentrations in the frontal cortex of rats dosed with 1 × 10 mg/kg d-FEN i.p. at an ambient temperature of either 23°C or 27°C
is shown. Linear regressions are depicted in both panels A and B along
with the 95% confidence intervals. Serotonin levels were determined in the frontal cortex of rats sacrificed 4 days after FEN exposure.
|
|
Drug levels and hyperthermia.
Although based on the limited
number of five animals dosed with d-FEN at elevated ambient
temperature, there was a clear tendency for a positive correlation
between peak drug concentrations in microdialysate and peak increase of
body temperature the base line (fig. 5).
This was clearest for the combined micromolar concentration of NF and
FEN (r = 0.858, P = .063). The correlation between
FEN levels and peak body temperature increase was r = 0.801 (P = .104), whereas for NF this relationship was virtually
nonexistent (r =
0.286, P = .641). On average
the combined peak drug levels preceded the peak body temperature
increase by 80 ± 20 min. There was also a good correlation
between the 5-HT levels in the frontal cortex (4 days after FEN
exposure) compared with either the increase in body temperature above
the base-line temperature (fig. 5A) or peak body temperature (fig. 5B)
for rats dosed in the 23°C and 27°C environments.

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Fig. 5.
Relationship between peak combined (FEN + NF) drug
concentrations in microdialysate and peak hyperthermia of rats dosed
with 1 × 10 mg/kg d-FEN i.p. at 27°C ambient
temperature. Linear regression of maximum concentration (µM) of FEN + NF in the microdialysate, which preceded the peak body temperature over
base line by 80 ± 20 min.
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|
 |
Discussion |
This study demonstrates that after a single s.c. or i.p.
administration, like amphetamine levels in the striatum (Clausing et al., 1995
), peak microdialysate levels of FEN in the
frontal cortex are reached at approximately 40 to 60 min after dosing ("Results," figs.1 and 2A). However, after multiple doses of 5 mg/kg s.c. FEN the time-to-peak microdialysis level is extended to 80 min or more. We have also observed that depletion of 5-HT and 5-HIAA
(figs. 3 and 4) subsequent to d-FEN administration is
increased at an elevated ambient temperature (27°C), but this potentiation is not caused by FEN and NF pharmacokinetics (fig. 2).
This indicates that elevated temperature does not appreciably alter the
pharmacokinetics of FEN. However, there is a strong tendency for a
positive correlation between total drug concentration (FEN + NF) in
microdialysate and drug-induced hyperthermia in the 27°C environment
(fig. 5). Considering the results of Stewart et al. (1997)
,
which show that at elevated environmental temperatures a dose of 2.5 mg/kg d-FEN is the threshold for depleting brain 5-HT levels
whereas 5 mg/kg produces long-term depletions (greater than 1 week),
figures1 and 2, it appears that, after systemic administration of
d-FEN, FEN levels in microdialysate need to exceed 0.25 µM
for appreciable depletions of 5-HT to occur. An 0.25 µM FEN level in
microdialysate would correspond to an approximate extracellular level
of between 1.25 µM (calculated from the probe in vitro
recovery efficiency shown under "Methods") and 2.5 µM (calculated
by the actual in vivo recovery efficiency reported previously for amphetamine; Clausing et al., 1995
).
According to table 3 plasma concentrations expected to produce
neurotoxicity would be slightly less than 1 µM, whereas actual brain
concentrations would have to approach 50 µM.
When the existing differences in experimental design are taken into
account, our data for plasma and brain tissue concentrations of FEN and
NF are in good agreement with the relatively few studies that
investigated the pharmacokinetics of the d-isomer of FEN (Jori et al., 1978
; Caccia et al., 1992
; Anelli
et al., 1995
). In contrast to our earlier study with
d-amphetamine (Clausing et al., 1995
), a much
larger build-up of drug concentration in microdialysate as well as
tissue occurred after multiple doses of 5 mg/kg d-FEN,
spaced 2 hr apart. This confirms earlier observations by Blundell
et al. (1975)
who described a more rapid clearance of
amphetamine as compared with FEN and a longer excretion half-life of
d-FEN as compared with d-amphetamine. Although
the rate of clearance of FEN is much lower than of amphetamine, the
ratio of microdialysate levels to plasma levels is similar for the two compounds with FEN ratios being between 0.3 and 0.75 at doses ranging
from 2 to 10 mg/kg d-FEN compared with 0.5 to 0.7 for doses
of amphetamine between 1.0 and 15 mg/kg (Clausing et al., 1995
).
Significant regional variation was observed for FEN and NF
concentrations. Although regional differences are known for the 5-HT
depleting effect of d-FEN, to our knowledge regional
variation for drug levels has not yet been described. The cortex, a
region particularly sensitive to d-FEN-induced reductions of
5-HT (Steranka and Sanders-Bush, 1979
; Kleven et al., 1988
),
turned out to also be a region of high FEN and NF levels (present
study). Accordingly, the hypothalamus was described by these same
authors as less sensitive to 5-HT depletion and displayed the lowest
FEN and NF concentrations in our investigation. Further studies will be
necessary to see if regionally there is a positive correlation in 5-HT
depletions with FEN levels and 5-HT innervation.
The interpretation and causes of the well-established 5-HT-depleting
properties of d-FEN are controversial. Long-term decreases in tissue concentrations of 5-HT (as well as vesicular 5-HT and 5-HT
re-uptake sites) are used as an important indication of toxicity to the
serotonergic system (Kleven and Seiden, 1989
; Appel et al.,
1990
). Others argue that such decreases could also be explained as
functional down-regulation, i.e., reduced density of the
5-HT transporter per nerve ending (Gobbi et al., 1992
, 1996
)
instead of neurodegeneration. Moreover, several indices, used by other investigators, of serotonergic neurotoxicity used by some investigators (e.g., astrogliosis, neuronal sprouting and persisting
behavioral effects) failed to occur after FEN administration (Lorens
et al., 1990
; Baumgarten et al., 1992
). In
contrast, Westphalen and Dodd (1995)
, with a novel technique which
supposedly can reflect the quantity of nerve endings able to form
synaptosomes, reported that the loss of 5-HT reuptake transporter in
FEN-treated rats was similar to the "neurotoxic model"
(i.e., loss of nerve terminals) rather than to the
"transporter ablation model" with otherwise intact serotonergic
nerve terminals.
Our observation that increased indole depletion is not caused by
altered pharmacokinetics after hyperthermia is an important finding
because pharmacokinetics can play an important role in FEN depletion of
5-HT (Anelli et al., 1995
). We have reported previously that
amphetamine-induced hyperthermia potentiates dopaminergic terminal
degeneration, not by altering the pharmacokinetics (Bowyer et
al., 1994
; Clausing et al., 1995
) but probably by
increasing endogenous reactive intermediates responsible for terminal
degeneration (Bowyer and Holson, 1995
). Stewart et al.
(1997)
have shown that, even at an elevated environmental temperature
of 27°C when hyperthermia occurs and 5-HT depletions are more
pronounced, doses of between 2.5 and 5 mg/kg are necessary for 5-HT
depletions. With the 0.25 µM microdialysate levels seen after a 2 mg/kg dose of d-FEN (fig.1), we can extrapolate the
approximate threshold extracellular brain levels of FEN necessary for
5-HT depletions. With the in vitro recovery of FEN of 23%
an extracellular level of about 1.25 µM FEN would be present after 2 mg/kg d-FEN; whereas if the true in vivo recovery
is closer to 10% which we have seen previously for
d-amphetamine (Clausing et al., 1995
), the
extracellular level necessary for 5-HT depletion would be greater than
2.5 µM. These would correspond to plasma levels slightly less than 1 µM and brain levels approaching 50 µM.
In conclusion, hyperthermia increases the indole depletion produced by
d-FEN but not via pharmacokinetics although
pharmacokinetics can influence the occurrence of hyperthermia. The
ratio of FEN levels in microdialysate to plasma is similar to that
observed with d-amphetamine, although, as expected, the
clearance of FEN from microdialysate is much slower than that of
amphetamine. Furthermore, the data on brain pharmacokinetics obtained
in these studies indicate that the extracellular levels of FEN
necessary for 5-HT depletions is between 1.25 and 2.5 µM, whereas
plasma and brain levels would have to approach 1 µM and 50 µM,
respectively. These data may aid in determining the doses of
d-FEN that are necessary to produce neurotoxicity/neuroregulatory changes in the brain.
Accepted for publication October 13, 1997.
Received for publication April 24, 1997.