Antiemetic effect of a tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonist GR205171 on cisplatin-induced early and delayed emesis in the pigeon.

2003 
Cisplatin (4 mg/kg, i.v.) induced both early emesis, which appears within the first 8-h period, and delayed emesis, which appears between 8 and 48 h after its administration to pigeons. GR205171 ([(2S-cis)-N-((2-methoxy-5(5-(trifluoromethyl)-1H-tetrazol-1-yl)-phenyl) methyl)-2-phenyl-3-piperidinamine dihydrochloride]) administered intramuscularly (1–10 mg/kg) reduced significantly the number of emetic response to cisplatin: this reduction was 60–81% (P<0.05) for early emesis and 48–64% (P<0.05) for the delayed response. Intracerebroventricularly administered GR205171 (30 μg/kg) also reduced the number of emetic responses: 53% (P<0.05) in early emesis and 88% (P<0.05) in the delayed response. However, the latency time to the first emesis was not affected by GR205171. Direct injection of cisplatin (10 μg/kg) into the fourth ventricle produced emesis, which was reduced by GR205171 administered via the peripheral or central route. Substance P-immunoreactive fibres were distributed throughout the dorsal vagal complex. These results suggest that the antiemetic effect of GR205171 on both emetic responses to cisplatin acts on a central site, and that the onset of the emetic response may be mediated partly via GR205171-insensitive mechanisms.
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