Myers_2010_Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav_94_477

Reference

Title : Systemic administration of the potential countermeasure huperzine reversibly inhibits central and peripheral acetylcholinesterase activity without adverse cognitive-behavioral effects - Myers_2010_Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav_94_477
Author(s) : Myers TM , Sun W , Saxena A , Doctor BP , Bonvillain AJ , Clark MG
Ref : Pharmacol Biochem Behav , 94 :477 , 2010
Abstract :

Huperzine A is potentially superior to pyridostigmine bromide as a pretreatment for nerve agent intoxication because it inhibits acetylcholinesterase both peripherally and centrally, unlike pyridostigmine, which acts only peripherally. Using rhesus monkeys, we evaluated the time course of acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase inhibition following four different doses of -(-)huperzine A: 5, 10, 20, and 40 microg/kg. Acetylcholinesterase inhibition peaked 30 min after intramuscular injection and varied dose dependently, ranging from about 30% to 75%. Subsequently, cognitive-behavioral functioning was also evaluated at each dose of huperzine A using a six-item serial-probe recognition task that assessed attention, motivation, and working memory. Huperzine did not impair performance, but physostigmine did. The results demonstrate that huperzine A can selectively and reversibly inhibit acetylcholinesterase without cognitive-behavioral side effects, thus warranting further study.

PubMedSearch : Myers_2010_Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav_94_477
PubMedID: 19909771

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Citations formats

Myers TM, Sun W, Saxena A, Doctor BP, Bonvillain AJ, Clark MG (2010)
Systemic administration of the potential countermeasure huperzine reversibly inhibits central and peripheral acetylcholinesterase activity without adverse cognitive-behavioral effects
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 94 :477

Myers TM, Sun W, Saxena A, Doctor BP, Bonvillain AJ, Clark MG (2010)
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 94 :477