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Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors

Though quinoline anti-infective agents-associated neurotoxicity has been reported in the early 1970s, it only recently received regulatory recognition. In 2019, the European Medicines Agency enforced strict use for quinoline antibiotics. Thus, the current study evaluates the relation between subacut...

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Autores principales: Kamel, Ahmed S., Mohamed, Ahmed F., Rabie, Mostafa A., Elsherbiny, Marwa E., Ahmed, Kawkab A., Khattab, Mahmoud M., Abdelkader, Noha F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879898/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35215363
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph15020251
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author Kamel, Ahmed S.
Mohamed, Ahmed F.
Rabie, Mostafa A.
Elsherbiny, Marwa E.
Ahmed, Kawkab A.
Khattab, Mahmoud M.
Abdelkader, Noha F.
author_facet Kamel, Ahmed S.
Mohamed, Ahmed F.
Rabie, Mostafa A.
Elsherbiny, Marwa E.
Ahmed, Kawkab A.
Khattab, Mahmoud M.
Abdelkader, Noha F.
author_sort Kamel, Ahmed S.
collection PubMed
description Though quinoline anti-infective agents-associated neurotoxicity has been reported in the early 1970s, it only recently received regulatory recognition. In 2019, the European Medicines Agency enforced strict use for quinoline antibiotics. Thus, the current study evaluates the relation between subacute exposure to diiodohydroxyquinoline (DHQ), a commonly misused amebicide, with the development of motor and sensory abnormalities, highlighting age and gender as possible predisposing factors. Eighty rats were randomly assigned to eight groups according to their gender, age, and drug exposure; namely, four control groups received saline (adult male, adult female, young male, and young female), and the other four groups received DHQ. Young and adult rats received DHQ in doses of 176.7 and 247.4 mg/kg/day, respectively. After 4 weeks, rats were tested for sensory abnormality using analgesiometer, hot plate, and hind paw cold allodynia tests, and for motor function using open field and rotarod tests. Herein, the complex behavioral data were analyzed by principal component analysis to reduce the high number of variables to a lower number of representative factors that extracted components related to sensory, motor, and anxiety-like behavior. Behavioral outcomes were reflected in a histopathological examination of the cerebral cortex, striatum, spinal cord, and sciatic nerve, which revealed degenerative changes as well demyelination. Noteworthy, young female rats were more susceptible to DHQ’s toxicity than their counterparts. Taken together, these findings confirm previous safety concerns regarding quinoline-associated neurotoxicity and provide an impetus to review risk/benefit balance for their use.
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spelling pubmed-88798982022-02-26 Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors Kamel, Ahmed S. Mohamed, Ahmed F. Rabie, Mostafa A. Elsherbiny, Marwa E. Ahmed, Kawkab A. Khattab, Mahmoud M. Abdelkader, Noha F. Pharmaceuticals (Basel) Article Though quinoline anti-infective agents-associated neurotoxicity has been reported in the early 1970s, it only recently received regulatory recognition. In 2019, the European Medicines Agency enforced strict use for quinoline antibiotics. Thus, the current study evaluates the relation between subacute exposure to diiodohydroxyquinoline (DHQ), a commonly misused amebicide, with the development of motor and sensory abnormalities, highlighting age and gender as possible predisposing factors. Eighty rats were randomly assigned to eight groups according to their gender, age, and drug exposure; namely, four control groups received saline (adult male, adult female, young male, and young female), and the other four groups received DHQ. Young and adult rats received DHQ in doses of 176.7 and 247.4 mg/kg/day, respectively. After 4 weeks, rats were tested for sensory abnormality using analgesiometer, hot plate, and hind paw cold allodynia tests, and for motor function using open field and rotarod tests. Herein, the complex behavioral data were analyzed by principal component analysis to reduce the high number of variables to a lower number of representative factors that extracted components related to sensory, motor, and anxiety-like behavior. Behavioral outcomes were reflected in a histopathological examination of the cerebral cortex, striatum, spinal cord, and sciatic nerve, which revealed degenerative changes as well demyelination. Noteworthy, young female rats were more susceptible to DHQ’s toxicity than their counterparts. Taken together, these findings confirm previous safety concerns regarding quinoline-associated neurotoxicity and provide an impetus to review risk/benefit balance for their use. MDPI 2022-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8879898/ /pubmed/35215363 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph15020251 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kamel, Ahmed S.
Mohamed, Ahmed F.
Rabie, Mostafa A.
Elsherbiny, Marwa E.
Ahmed, Kawkab A.
Khattab, Mahmoud M.
Abdelkader, Noha F.
Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors
title Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors
title_full Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors
title_fullStr Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors
title_short Experimental Evidence for Diiodohydroxyquinoline-Induced Neurotoxicity: Characterization of Age and Gender as Predisposing Factors
title_sort experimental evidence for diiodohydroxyquinoline-induced neurotoxicity: characterization of age and gender as predisposing factors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879898/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35215363
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph15020251
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