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Journal article

Coenzyme Q10 does not prevent oral dyskinesias induced by long-term haloperidol treatment of rats

From

University of Bergen1

Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, Technical University of Denmark2

Tardive dyskinesia (TD) is a debilitating side effect of long-term treatment with neuroleptics with an unclear pathophysiologic basis. It has been proposed that TD may be a result of neuroleptic-induced oxidative stress. To investigate this hypothesis, we studied if neuroleptic-induced oral dyskinesias in rats, a putative analogue to human TD, could be prevented by the antioxidant coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10).

Rats received 16 weeks of treatment with haloperidol decanoate (HAL) IM alone or together with orally administered CoQ10, and the behavior was recorded during and after treatment. HAL significantly increased the level of oral dyskinesias, and the increase persisted for 12 weeks after drug withdrawal.

Cotreatment with CoQ10 did not attenuate the development of HAL-induced oral dyskinesia. Despite adequate absorption of orally administered CoQ10, shown by the increased serum levels of CoQ10, no increase of either CoQ10 or coenzyme Q9 was detected in the brain. These results suggest that cotreatment with CoQ10 does not inhibit the development of HAL-induced oral dyskinesias in rats, and that further studies seem to be needed in order to clarify the pharmakokinetics of CoQ10 in rats

Language: English
Year: 1999
Pages: 637-642
ISSN: 18735177 and 00913057
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/s0091-3057(99)00118-5

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