acefyllin-piperazinate has been researched along with Seizures* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for acefyllin-piperazinate and Seizures
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A comparative study of aminophylline- and acepifylline-induced seizures and death in the chemoconvulsion model in rats.
The convulsive, pro-convulsive and lethal effects of two theophylline-containing bronchodilating agents, aminophylline and acepifylline, have been evaluated in rats. Aminophylline (theophylline ethylenediamine) caused seizures and death in a dose-dependent manner; an intraperitoneal dose of 250 mg kg-1 caused seizures and death in all rats. Intraperitoneal doses of acepifylline (theophylline ethanoate of piperazine) up to 1000 mg kg-1, however, did not cause seizure or death. Further, pre-treatment of the rats by intraperitoneal administration of a subconvulsive dose (100 mg kg-1) of aminophylline caused a significant decrease in CD50 and LD50 values for pentylenetetrazole and a significant increase in the number of positive responders (i.e. rats with a pentylenetetrazole-induced seizure score of 3 or more on a seizure scale ranging from 0 to 6) and death rate compared with those obtained for rats pre-treated with an equivalent intraperitoneal dose (140 mg kg-1) of acepifylline ('equivalent dose' referred to here denotes the theophylline content of the two preparations). The study has established the neurosafety profile of acepifylline and documents a safer alternative to aminophylline for use in asthmatics suffering from concomitant epilepsy or other seizure-prone neurological defects. Topics: Aminophylline; Animals; Bronchodilator Agents; Convulsants; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Interactions; Male; Pentylenetetrazole; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Seizures; Theophylline | 1997 |