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MUTUAL POTENTIATION OF AMPHETAMINE AND AMYLOBARBITONE MEASURED BY ACTIVITY IN RATS
Author(s) -
RUSHTON RUTH,
STEINBERG HANNAH
Publication year - 1963
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0366-0826
DOI - 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1963.tb01528.x
Subject(s) - amphetamine , chemistry , barbiturate , stimulant , ataxia , sodium , pharmacology , psychology , medicine , dopamine , psychiatry , neuroscience , organic chemistry
Dose/response relations have been analysed for the actions of amphetamine‐barbiturate mixtures on exploratory activity and ataxia in rats. Amphetamine sulphate and amylobarbitone sodium were studied separately and together (in a constant ratio of 1:20) in doses which ranged from those producing no effect to those which incapacitated the animals. Dexamphetamine and amylobarbitone were similarly studied in a ratio of 1:6.5; this corresponds to the ratio of a commercial preparation, Drinamyl. The results showed that mixtures could stimulate exploratory activity and their maximal effects were much greater than the effects produced by any dose of the separate drugs. The maximal effect with the first dose‐ratio included conspicuous ataxia, but the maximal effect with the second ratio did not. Further experiments in which the dose of one drug was held constant and that of the other was varied showed that maximal effects on activity could be obtained with mixtures of dexamphetamine and amylobarbitone. Equivalent effects could be obtained both with relatively small and with relatively large amounts of the two drugs, in varying ratios; some constituent doses of the individual drugs were found to be optimal; whether the mixture effect was accompanied by ataxia depended largely on the constituent amount of barbiturate. For practical purposes mixtures producing maximal effects on activity with the smallest amounts of both drugs and not accompanied by ataxia might be most desirable, and these can be approximately read off from an isobol plotted from the results. It was concluded that the marked stimulant effects of the amphetamine‐barbiturate mixtures on activity of rats could be regarded as due to true potentiation.

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