Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Atropine-comatose therapy was performed in 18 patients with schizophrenia and disorders in the framework of an obsessive-syndrome. Improvement was seen in 11 of the 18 patients. A psychopathological analysis of obsessive disorders in this group of patients demonstrated that they were characterized by manifold traits, instability, abstract content of obsessions, a tendency towards their complication and expansion of obsessional disturbances. The absence of any effect was seen in 7 of the cases. They were characterized by montony, monomorphism, everday content and by their structure were near to constitutionally conditioned psychasthenic doubtfulness.
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PMID:[Refining the indications for atropine-coma therapy]. 89 1

Phencyclidine (1-(1-phenylcyclohexyl)piperidine [PCP]), a behaviorally active analogue (1-(1-m-aminophenylcyclohexyl)piperidine [m-amino-PCP]), and two behaviorally inactive analogues (1-(1-m-nitrophenylcyclohexyl)piperidine and 1-piperidinocyclohexanecarbonitrile) block neuromuscular transmission, depress the amplitude and rate of rise of directly elicited action potentials in frog sartorius muscle, and cause voltage- and concentration-dependent decreases of the peak end-plate current amplitude. This implies that all four compounds block the ion channel of the acetylcholine (ACh) receptors. Only PCP and m-amino-PCP prolong the action potential, block delayed rectification, potentiate muscle twitch, increase quantal content of end-plate potentials, and block K+-induced 86Rb+ efflux from rat brain synaptosomes. PCP also possesses central and peripheral antimuscarinic activity but is much less potent than 3-quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB). Atropine, scopolamine, and QNB require much higher concentrations to induce behavioral alterations than to block muscarinic receptors. Thus PCP and some of its behaviorally active and inactive derivatives share two common effects, blockade of the nicotinic ACh receptor-ion channel complex and blockade of central and peripheral muscarinic receptors. The feature that apparently separates behaviorally active from inactive derivatives of PCP is their ability to block K+ conductance (gK) and thereby potentiate muscle twitch and increase the release of transmitters from central and peripheral synapses. The similarity between PCP-induced behavioral alterations and primary schizophrenia in humans raises the possibility of involvement of an altered gK in the human disease.
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PMID:Interactions of phencyclidine with ion channels of nerve and muscle: behavioral implications. 630 62

It has been suggested that changes in brain 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor function may contribute to some behavior disorders, such as anxiety, schizophrenia and drug abuse. We are using the whole-cell version of the patch-clamp technique to study the function of 5-hydroxytryptamine3 channels in neurons freshly dissociated from rat nodose ganglion. In these cells, 5-hydroxytryptamine elicits an inward current over the concentration range of 0.25-100 microM (EC50 = 2.62 microM) by activating 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptors. The muscarinic cholinergic antagonist atropine reduced the amplitude of 5-hydroxytryptamine activated inward current in a concentration-dependent manner. Other muscarinic antagonists, scopolamine, dexetimide, the M1 muscarinic receptor antagonist pirenzepine, the M2 receptor antagonist methoctramine and the M3 receptor antagonist 4-DAMP methiodide also inhibited 5-hydroxytryptamine-induced inward current. Atropine did not appear to change the reversal potential of this current. In the presence of 5 microM atropine, the concentration-response curve for 5-hydroxytryptamine current was shifted to the right in a parallel fashion. The EC50 value for 5-hydroxytryptamine was increased from 2.62 to 8.76 microM. Schild plots of increasing atropine and 5-hydroxytryptamine concentrations revealed a pA2 value of 5.74 for atropine (apparent KD = 1.8 microM). These observations suggest that atropine competitively antagonizes the activation of a receptor for the neurotransmitter serotonin, a novel action of muscarinic antagonists in the nervous system. This effect of atropine may contribute to the clinical symptoms seen in severe atropine intoxication.
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PMID:The effect of atropine on the activation of 5-hydroxytryptamine3 channels in rat nodose ganglion neurons. 753 5