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Original Article

Pharmacological Action of a New Spin Trapping Compound, 2-Phenyl DMPO, In the Adriamycin-Induced cardiotoxicity

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Pages 81-87 | Received 20 May 1994, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Adriamycin (ADR)-induced cardiotoxicity was adopted in this investigation as a reliable model of radical-dependent myocardial pathology allowing both quantitative studies of drug activity in the isolated organ and in vivo comparison of the cardio-protection vs. general toxicity. Since commercially available lipophilic spin trapping compounds were shown to develop significant protective activity, in this investigation a newly synthesized spin trap (2-phenyl-DMPO) was studied. In Langendorff rat heart, 200μM ADR induced a significant impairment of contractile performance, while 2-phenyl-DMPO was not cardiotoxic up to the 5 mM concentration. By this dose, 2-phenyl-DMPO induced a significant protection against the ADR-induced contractile impairment. In in vivo experiments, ADR (9 mg/kg i. v.) produced a significant impairment of ECG, coronary flow and contractility. The continuous administration of 2-phenyl-DMPO i.p. by osmotic pump delivering 0.3,μmol/hr was unable to protect the animals against the cardiotoxic signs. Seven days after ADR administration, severe general toxicity (arrest of body weight increase) and myelotoxicity were also observed. 2-phenyl-DMPO was unable to protect the animals from these toxic signs. The present results confirm that lipophilic spin traps can be a new class of antiradical drugs, as confirmed by the experiments performed in the isolated heart with the 2-phenyl-DMPO; however, this last compound is probably metabolized in vivo to inactive derivatives.

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