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Merck
  • Methoxyphenamine inhibits basal and histamine-induced nasal congestion in anaesthetized rats.

Methoxyphenamine inhibits basal and histamine-induced nasal congestion in anaesthetized rats.

British journal of pharmacology (1990-10-01)
W A Lau, R G King, A L Boura
초록

1. Nasal resistance in anaesthetized rats was assessed by measuring air overflow during ventilation of the nasal passages at constant pressure. Nasal basal resistance was reduced in a dose-dependent manner by methoxyphenamine hydrochloride (0.01-30 mg kg-1, i.v.), pseudoephedrine hydrochloride (0.03-3 mg kg-1, i.v.) and adrenaline bitartrate (0.01-3 micrograms kg-1, i.v.). Both methoxyphenamine and pseudoephedrine were less potent and less efficacious than adrenaline but caused longer-lasting responses. 2. Nasal congestion induced by histamine (0.2% nebulised solution passed into the nasal passages for 15 s) was inhibited by i.v. administration of methoxyphenamine, pseudoephedrine, adrenaline, methoxamine or tyramine: the ID50s against 0.2% histamine-induced nasal congestion were 1.16 (95% confidence limits; 0.5, 1.8) mg kg-1, 0.25 (0.19, 0.33) mg kg-1, 0.037 (0.018, 0.06) micrograms kg-1, 8.12 (6.74, 9.65) micrograms kg-1 and 30.6 (26.1, 35.8) micrograms kg-1 respectively. 3. The inhibitory effects of both methoxyphenamine and tyramine on histamine-induced nasal congestion were reduced after administration of desmethylimipramine (0.1 and 1 mg kg-1, i.v.) or prazosin (0.1 and 0.3 mg kg-1, i.v.). Similarly, the inhibitory effects of methoxamine were reduced after prazosin (0.1 and 0.3 mg kg-1). 4. These results indicate that methoxyphenamine (1 mg kg-1, i.v.) inhibits histamine-induced nasal congestion in the rat. This action, at least in part, is probably indirect being mediated by release of neuronal noradrenaline which then acts on alpha 1-adrenoceptors.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Methoxyphenamine hydrochloride, ≥99%