Methylphenidate clinically oral doses improved brain and heart glutathione redox status and evoked renal and cardiac tissue injury in rats - 09/03/18
, Vera Marisa Costa a, José Alberto Duarte b, Margarida Duarte-Araújo c, Salomé Gonçalves-Monteiro c, Bastos Maria de Lourdes a, Félix Carvalho a, João Paulo Capela a, d, ⁎ 
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Graphical abstract |
Highlights |
• | Overdiagnosis and drug misuse raises concerns on methylphenidate (MPH) use. |
• | Healthy adolescent rats were given oral MPH doses that mimic those used by humans. |
• | One week MPH exposure did not change body temperature, weight, food or water intake. |
• | MPH improved the brain and heart glutathione redox status, but caused heart injury. |
• | MPH evoked kidney tissue damage accompanied by NF-ĸB nuclear translocation. |
Abstract |
Methylphenidate (MPH) is a first-line stimulant drug to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Overdiagnosis of ADHD and MPH abuse lead to serious concerns about the possible long-term adverse consequences of MPH in healthy children and adolescents. We aimed to evaluate MPH effects in adolescent male Wistar rats (postnatal day 40) using an oral dose scheme (2 daily MPH doses 5 mg/kg in a 5% sucrose solution, 5 h apart, for 7 days) that mimics the therapeutic doses given to human adolescents. Twenty-four hours after the last MPH administration, rats were sacrificed and brain areas [cerebellum, prefrontal cortex (PFC), hippocampus, and striatum], peripheral organs (liver, heart, and kidneys), and blood were collected for biochemical and histological analysis.
MPH treatment did not alter rats’ body temperature or weight, neither food or water intake throughout the experiment. The ratio of reduced glutathione/oxidized glutathione (GSH/GSSG) significantly increased in the PFC and hippocampus of MPH-treated rats, meanwhile protein carbonylation remained unchanged in the brain. In the heart, the GSH/GSSG ratio and GSH levels were significantly increased, with decreased GSSG, while histology revealed significant damage, namely interstitial edema, vascular congestion, and presence of a fibrin-like material in the interstitial space. In the kidneys, MPH treatment resulted in extensive necrotic areas with cellular disorganization and cell infiltration, and immunohistochemistry analysis revealed a marked activation of nuclear factor-ĸB.
This study showed that clinically relevant oral MPH doses improve the GSH redox status in the brain and heart, but evoke heart and kidney tissue damage to adolescent rats.
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : ADHD, ALT, AST, ATP, CK-MB, DA, GSH, GSHt, GSSG, HClO4, i.p, min, MPH, NaCl, NF-ĸB, NE, OD, PBS, PFC, PND, SD, SDS, Total-CK
Keywords : Methylphenidate, Adolescent rat, GSH/GSSG ratio, Cardiotoxicity, Nephrotoxicity, Nuclear factor-ĸB
Esquema
Vol 100
P. 551-563 - avril 2018 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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