 AMPA Receptor Potentiation can Prevent Ethanol-Induced Intoxication
AMPA Receptor Potentiation can Prevent Ethanol-Induced Intoxication Neuropsychopharmacology advance online publication 12 September 2007;
We present a substantial series of behavioral and imaging  experiments, which demonstrate, for the first time, that increasing AMPA  receptor-mediated neurotransmission via administration of potent and selective  biarylsulfonamide AMPA potentiators LY404187 and LY451395 reverses the central  effects of an acutely intoxicating dose of ethanol in the rat.
Using  pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI), we observed that LY404187  attenuated ethanol-induced reductions in blood oxygenation level dependent  (BOLD) in the anesthetized rat brain. A similar attenuation was apparent when  measuring local cerebral glucose utilization (LCGU) via  C14-2-deoxyglucose autoradiography in freely moving conscious rats.
Both LY404187 and LY451395 significantly and dose-dependently reversed  ethanol-induced deficits in both motor coordination and disruptions in an  operant task where animals were trained to press a lever for food reward. Both  prophylactic and acute intervention treatment with LY404187 reversed  ethanol-induced deficits in motor coordination.
Given that LY451395 and related AMPA receptor potentiators/ampakines are tolerated in both healthy volunteers and elderly patients, these data suggest that such compounds may form a potential management strategy for acute alcohol intoxication.
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