New Research Shows How Antipsychotic Drugs Cause Weight Gain
(February 2, 2007) -- Scientists say they have pinpointed a mechanism in
the brain that helps explain why certain
antipsychotic drugs can
trigger increased appetite and potentially dangerous weight gain in
patients.
The side effect has cast a cloud on newer and more powerful drugs, such
as Eli Lilly & Co.'s
Zyprexa, used to treat schizophrenia and other mental illnesses.
Significant weight gain increases the risk of life-threatening
complications, including heart disease and diabetes.
Histamine may help spur the weight gain seen in patients taking certain
kinds of antipsychotic drugs, researchers say.
In some cases, patients taking these drugs to treat
mental illness gain
so much weight that they develop serious complications such as heart disease
and diabetes.
"We've now connected a whole class of antipsychotics to natural brain
chemicals that trigger appetite. Our identification of the molecular players
that link such drugs to increased food intake means there's now hope for
finding a newer generation of drugs without the weight-gain side effects,"
Dr. Solomon H. Snyder, professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins School
of Medicine in Baltimore , said in a prepared statement.
The latest study, appearing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, links a class of antipsychotics to brain chemicals that regulate
appetite. The mechanism was discovered in mice. A similar link still needs
to be established in people.
"If we understand why the drugs make you fat, we can design drugs that
don't do that," said Snyder.
The Hopkins team suspected that certain antipsychotic drugs might trigger
an overreaction in AMPK, an enzyme in brain cells that controls appetite in
mice and likely does the same in humans.
To test this theory, the researchers injected mice with clozapine (Clozaril),
a drug commonly prescribed to treat
schizophrenia and
bipolar disorders
in people who respond poorly to conventional drugs.
AMPK activity quadrupled in the mice after they were given clozapine, the
researchers report.
As their research progressed, the Hopkins team focused on a link between
a histamine receptor, clozapine, AMPK activity and appetite. They injected
clozapine into mice genetically engineered to lack the histamine receptor.
The mice showed no increase in AMPK activity.
Histamine is already well known for its role in triggering allergy
symptoms.
"Histamine also has a long history as a suspect in weight control, but no
one ever could put a finger on the exact link," Snyder said. "The connection
we've made between its receptor and appetite control is incredibly
intriguing and opens new avenues for research on weight control, possibly
including drugs that suppress appetite safely."
The study is expected to be published online in this week's issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Source: HealthyDay News
Last updated: 02/07
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