Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.16.2 (PCP)
3,761 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Phencyclidine (PCP) and some of its pharmacological congeners inhibit the signal transduction at specific excitatory amino acid receptors of cerebellar granule cells in primary cultures. These drugs do not bind to the transmitter recognition sites, and affinity of this specific binding site is increased by the presence of the transmitter bound to its recognition sites. PCP inhibits phosphatidylinositol phosphate hydrolysis mediated by Mg2+-sensitive glutamate receptors (GP1) but not that mediated by Mg2+-insensitive glutamate receptors (GP2). In addition, PCP inhibits Ca2+ influx and cGMP formation mediated by the activation of Mg2+-sensitive glutamate receptors (GC1) but not that mediated by Mg2+-insensitive glutamate receptors (GC2). In this cell culture the activation of phosphatidylinositol phosphate hydrolysis by muscarinic receptor agonists is not affected by PCP. Since PCP inhibits noncompetitively GP1 and GC1 signal transduction it may act as a negative allosteric modulator of signal transduction at both receptors. The pharmacological profile of PCP and its congeners delimits a class of drugs modulating allosterically the action of the primary transmitter at GP1 and GC1 receptors. These drugs need the presence of the transmitter to act and they cannot be termed inverse agonists because they are devoid of activity in the absence of the transmitter; moreover, they do not bind to the transmitter recognition site nor do they prevent the transmitter binding to its recognition sites.
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PMID:Phencyclidine is a negative allosteric modulator of signal transduction at two subclasses of excitatory amino acid receptors. 303 32

The pattern of alcohol and drug abuse among 78 consecutive newly admitted patients to a middle Tennessee state hospital psychiatric ward was examined. There was a high prevalence of alcohol, marijuana, hypnotic sedative, and stimulant abuse among this patient population within 1 month prior to their hospitalization. However, only 1 patient gave a history of PCP abuse and none of the 76 plasma samples analyzed by the GCN and GC2-N methods was positive for PCP or its common analogues. This study does not support a high prevalence of PCP abuse among this group of psychiatric patients.
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PMID:Drug abuse among state hospital psychiatric inpatients with particular reference to PCP. 401 23

Routine blood samples of 145 consecutive patients seen in the Los Angeles County Psychiatric Hospital Emergency Room during a 48-hour weekday period in June 1979 were examined for phencyclidine (PCP) using a sensitive and specific gas capillary gas chromatographic nitrogen detector (GC2-N) method. Of these 145 samples 63 (43.4%) were positive and PCP levels ranged 0.34 to 142.9 nanograms/ml (mean 14.6 ng/ml +/- 3.4 S.E.M.). An analysis of the records of these 63 patients revealed a wide variety of psychotic clinical pictures resembling mania, depression or schizophrenia with relatively few of the supposedly characteristic manifestations of PCP intoxication. Each of the 63 patients had at least one manifestation of toxic psychosis and/or acute delirium, in addition to the florid symptoms characteristic of functional states. PCP measurement, pharmacokinetics and the possible relationships of this intoxication to the psychiatric manifestations are discussed.
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PMID:The urban epidemic of phencyclidine (PCP) use: clinical and laboratory evidence from a public psychiatric hospital emergency service. 721 23

By utilizing a glass capillary gas chromatographic nitrogen detector (GC2-N) method specific for phencyclidine (PCP) and sensitive to pg/mL in blood or urine samples, we have demonstrated occupational intoxication of law enforcement personnel charged with handling confiscated illegal PCP preparations. Further, we have demonstrated persistence of PCP in blood and urine for at least 6 months after the last known occupational exposure in one officer. Some aspects of the PCP problem are outlined, and possible mechanisms of the occupational intoxication are discussed.
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PMID:Occupational intoxication and long-term persistence of phencyclidine (PCP) in law enforcement personnel. 731 86

Utilizing a sensitive and specific gas chromatography nitrogen detector (GC2-N) method we have demonstrated phencyclidine (PCP) in the blood of a 65-year-old widowed Mexican-American woman who lived in a second floor apartment directly over an illegal laboratory utilizing open-vat methods of PCP synthesis. This is the first proof of such incidental PCP intoxication, although police officers regularly complain of developing symptoms of intoxication after raiding such clandestine laboratories and handling the confiscated products. The presumed mechanism of incidental intoxication with PCP and the psychiatric manifestations of this patient are described and discussed.
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PMID:Incidental intoxication with phencyclidine. 744 May 12