Acceleration of rat brain beta-adrenoceptor subsensitivity following the coadministration of histamine receptor antagonists with imipramine
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Inflammation Research
- Vol. 28 (3-4) , 153-158
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01967394
Abstract
Systemic administration of isoprenaline to rats produced a dose-dependent increase in water drinking which was effectively blocked by propranolol. This dipsogenic effect was significantly inhibited by the subacute (4 days) administration of imipramine (18.1. mg/kg/day) together with either the H1-histamine receptor antagonist, chlorpheniramine (0.1 or 1.32 mg/kg/day), or the H2-histamine antagonist, cimetidine (1.91 mg/kg/day) or ranitidine (0.60 or 1.51 mg/kg/day). The oral subacute administration of imipramine alone had no significant effect on this behavior. However, chronic ingestion of imipramine alone (21 days) caused a significant reduction in the isoprenaline-induced behavior. It is concluded that the desensitization of central beta-adrenoceptors, as evidenced by inhibition of isoprenaline-induced drinking, can be accelerated following the oral subacute co-administration of imipramine with either H1- or H2-histamine receptor antagonists. It also seems that central histamine receptors may partially contribute towards the mechanism of antidepressant effect of imipramine.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
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