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  2. Effects of the beta-carboline abecarnil on epileptic activity, EEG, sleep and behavior of rats

Effects of the beta-carboline abecarnil on epileptic activity, EEG, sleep and behavior of rats

  • Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 1992 Jul;42(3):401-5. doi: 10.1016/0091-3057(92)90132-y.
A M Coenen 1 D N Stephens E L Van Luijtelaar
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Psychology, University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Abstract

The profile of the anxiolytic beta-carboline isopropyl 6-benzyloxy-4-methoxymethyl beta-carboline-3-carboxylate (abecarnil; ZK 112 119), a partial agonist at benzodiazepine receptors, was determined in two experiments. In the first, abecarnil was given to WAG/Rij rats; these rats generate spontaneously occurring spike-wave discharges and are regarded as a model for absence epilepsy. Effects were measured on epileptic activity, together with those on the spectral content of the background electroencephalograph (EEG), as well as on ongoing behavior. In a second experiment, effects on sleep and behavior were investigated in Wistar rats. It was found that, similarly to classical benzodiazepines, abecarnil possessed a strong antiepileptic character and also changed the background EEG to more high-frequency waves and less spindle activity. It also produced more immobile behavior. Abecarnil induced only small, marginally significant increases in slow-wave sleep while reducing REM sleep as a proportion of total sleep. It also reduced the number of REM periods. These observations are consistent with the proposed partial agonist activity of abecarnil, a drug with interesting therapeutic implications.

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