About: Flunitrazepam is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1316 publications have been published within this topic receiving 38495 citations. The topic is also known as: Narcozep® & Rohypnol®.
TL;DR: Two metabolites of the steroid hormones progesterone and deoxycorticosterone are potent barbiturate-like ligands of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor-chloride ion channel complex and potentiated the inhibitory actions of GABA in cultured rat hippocampal and spinal cord neurons, which may explain the ability of certain steroid hormones to rapidly alter neuronal excitability.
Abstract: Two metabolites of the steroid hormones progesterone and deoxycorticosterone, 3 alpha-hydroxy-5 alpha-dihydroprogesterone and 3 alpha, 5 alpha-tetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone, are potent barbiturate-like ligands of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor-chloride ion channel complex. At concentrations between 10(-7) and 10(-5)M both steroids inhibited binding of the convulsant t-butylbicyclophosphorothionate to the GABA-receptor complex and increased the binding of the benzodiazepine flunitrazepam; they also stimulated chloride uptake (as measured by uptake of 36Cl-) into isolated brain vesicles, and potentiated the inhibitory actions of GABA in cultured rat hippocampal and spinal cord neurons. These data may explain the ability of certain steroid hormones to rapidly alter neuronal excitability and may provide a mechanism for the anesthetic and hypnotic actions of naturally occurring and synthetic anesthetic steroids.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that apigenin is a ligand for the central benzodiazepine receptors exerting anxiolytic and slight sedative effects but not being anticonvulsant or myorelaxant.
Abstract: The dried flower heads of Matricaria recutita L. (Asteraceae) are used in folk medicine to prepare a spasmolytic and sedative tea. Our fractionation of the aqueous extract of this plant led to the detection of several fractions with significant affinity for the central benzodiazepine receptor and to the isolation and identification of 5,7,4'-trihydroxyflavone (apigenin) in one of them. Apigenin competitively inhibited the binding of flunitrazepam with a Ki of 4 microM and had no effect on muscarinic receptors, alpha 1-adrenoceptors, and on the binding of muscimol to GABAA receptors. Apigenin had a clear anxiolytic activity in mice in the elevated plusmaze without evidencing sedation or muscle relaxant effects at doses similar to those used for classical benzodiazepines and no anticonvulsant action was detected. However, a 10-fold increase in dosage produced a mild sedative effect since a 26% reduction in ambulatory locomotor activity and a 35% decrement in hole-board parameters were evident. The results reported in this paper demonstrate that apigenin is a ligand for the central benzodiazepine receptors exerting anxiolytic and slight sedative effects but not being anticonvulsant or myorelaxant.
TL;DR: The highly selective sedative effect of zolpidem (as compared to myorelaxant and anticonvulsant effects) suggests that it may possess a specificity for certain subtypes of benzodiazepine receptors.
Abstract: Zolpidem [N,N,6-trimethyl-2-(4-methylphenyl)imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine-3-acetamide hemitartrate] is reported to be a rapid onset, short duration hypnotic that interacts at the benzodiazepine recognition site. The present report establishes the neuropsychopharmacological profile of zolpidem and compares it with those of benzodiazepine hypnotics. Although in mice the effects of zolpidem are qualitatively similar to those of midazolam, triazolam and flunitrazepam, sedation with zolpidem occurs at doses 10 and 20 times lower than those inducing anticonvulsant and myorelaxant effects, respectively. In contrast, the benzodiazepines studied induce sedation at doses causing myorelaxation and which are 2 to 6 times superior to those antagonizing pentetrazole-induced convulsions. In the rat, zolpidem induces sleep (as indicated behaviorally and electrocorticographically) and displays anticonflict activity in a punished drinking paradigm, as do the benzodiazepines. However, whereas benzodiazepine hypnotics induce EEG sleep patterns in curarized rats at doses similar or inferior to those active in the conflict test (in freely moving animals), the hypnotic effect of zolpidem is seen at doses 10 times lower than those producing an anticonflict effect. Moreover, a qualitative difference between the effects of zolpidem and benzodiazepines is observed in electrocorticographic recordings obtained in curarized rats: electrocorticographic hypersynchronization induced by zolpidem is dominated by the energy increase within the 2 to 4 Hz band whereas the benzodiazepines increase predominantly energy levels within the 12 to 14 Hz band. Studies of the sleep-wakefulness cycle in the rat and the cat revealed that hypnotic doses of zolpidem do not alter the pattern of physiological sleep, although elevated doses of the drug decrease paradoxical sleep and increase slow wave sleep. In rats trained to discriminate chlordiazepoxide, zolpidem fails to generalize with the chlordiazepoxide-associated lever indicating that the compound and benzodiazepines do not share the same discriminative stimulus properties. Nevertheless, the anticonvulsant, hypnotic, myorelaxant and anticonflict effects of zolpidem are antagonized by benzodiazepine receptor antagonist Ro 15-1788 and CGS 8216 indicating an involvement of the benzodiazepine recognition site in the action of this drug. The highly selective sedative effect of zolpidem (as compared to myorelaxant and anticonvulsant effects) suggests that it may possess a specificity for certain subtypes of benzodiazepine receptors.
TL;DR: The unique interactions of ethanol with GABAA receptors are shown and protein kinase isoenzymes as possible determinants of genetic differences in response to ethanol are suggested.
Abstract: Calcium/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C, PKC) has been suggested to play a role in the sensitivity of gamma-aminobutyrate type A (GABAA) receptors to ethanol. We tested a line of null mutant mice that lacks the gamma isoform of PKC (PKC gamma) to determine the role of this brain-specific isoenzyme in ethanol sensitivity. We found that the mutation reduced the amount of PKC gamma immunoreactivity in cerebellum to undetectable levels without altering the levels of the alpha, beta I, or beta II isoforms of PKC. The mutant mice display reduced sensitivity to the effects of ethanol on loss of righting reflex and hypothermia but show normal responses to flunitrazepam or pentobarbital. Likewise, GABAA receptor function of isolated brain membranes showed that the mutation abolished the action of ethanol but did not alter actions of flunitrazepam or pentobarbital. These studies show the unique interactions of ethanol with GABAA receptors and suggest protein kinase isoenzymes as possible determinants of genetic differences in response to ethanol.
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that benzodiazepine hypnotics induce specific changes in the EEG spectra which reflect the immediate and residual drug effects more sensitively than conventional sleep scores.
Abstract: The effect of a single, oral bedtime dose of the benzodiazepine hypnotics flunitrazepam (FR; 2 mg), flurazepam (FR; 30 mg), and triazolam (TR; 05 mg) on the sleep stages and the sleep EEG was investigated in eight healthy, young subjects In comparison to the placebo night, all drugs reduced the percentage of stage 1 and REM sleep, increased stage 2, and decreased the number of stage shifts For FN and FR, some of these changes persisted in the postdrug night All-night spectral analysis of the EEG showed a reduction of low-frequency activity (025-100 Hz) in stages 2, 3 + 4 and REM sleep, changes that persisted for all three drugs in the post-drug night In the drug nights, activity in the spindle frequency range (11-14 Hz) was enhanced particularly in stage 2 and 3 + 4, activity in the high frequency range (17-25 Hz) particularly in REM sleep and stage 1 In the first third of the drug night, the depression of low-frequency activity in stage 2 was either absent (FR) or less prominent (FN, TR) than in the following part of the night The results demonstrate that benzodiazepine hypnotics induce specific changes in the EEG spectra which reflect the immediate and residual drug effects more sensitively than conventional sleep scores