Effects of a specific benzodiazepine antagonist (RO 15-1788) on cerebral blood flow

1987 
: RO 15-1788, a specific benzodiazepine antagonist, although it effectively antagonizes the clinical effects of benzodiazepines (i.e., sedation and amnesia), can also induce subjective agonist effects such as sedation or inverse agonist effects such as anxiety. The purpose of this study was to investigate in seven healthy volunteers the effect of RO 15-1788 on cerebral blood flow when intravenously injected alone or with midazolam and to compare its effects with midazolam administered alone. Cerebral blood flow was measured with the 133xenon inhalation technique and the drugs were administered simultaneously in a double-blind, randomized fashion during the four following sessions: placebo-placebo; midazolam-placebo; RO 15-1788-placebo; midazolam-RO 15-1788. No difference in cerebral blood flow was noted between the placebo-placebo, the RO 15-1788-placebo, and the RO 15-1788-midazolam sessions--although midazolam injected alone decreased cerebral blood flow by 30%. The sedation, amnesia, and the electroencephalograph (EEG) and muscle tone changes observed with midazolam-placebo were not present during the RO 15-1788-placebo and RO 15-1788-midazolam sessions. This study demonstrates the absence of effects of RO 15-1788 on cerebral blood flow when injected alone and the efficacy of this new drug in antagonizing the depressant effects of midazolam on cerebral hemodynamics.
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