Metabolic interaction between ethanol, high-dose alprazolam and its two main metabolites using human liver microsomes in vitro.
Einosuke Tanaka, Takako Nakamura, Masaru Terada, Tatsuo Shinozuka, Katsuya Honda
Index: J. Forensic Leg. Med. 14(6) , 348-51, (2007)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Alprazolam is widely used as a short-acting antidepressant and anxiolytic agent and its effect appears at very low doses while ethanol is used as a social drug worldwide. Sometimes, toxic interactions occur following combined administration of these two drugs. In this study we have investigated the interaction between ethanol and high-dose alprazolam using human liver microsomes in vitro. The interaction effects between ethanol and alprazolam were examined by a mixed-function oxidation reaction using a human liver microsomal preparation. Alprazolam and its two main metabolites (alpha-hydroxyalprazolam: alpha-OH alprazolam, 4-hydroxyalprazolam: 4-OH alprazolam) were measured by HPLC/UV. The production of 4-OH alprazolam, one main metabolite of alprazolam, was weakly inhibited by higher dose of ethanol, but not alpha-OH alprazolam. These results using a human liver microsomal preparation show that the production of 4-OH alprazolam is weakly inhibited by ethanol but not alpha-OH alprazolam. Toxic levels may be reached by simultaneous administration of ethanol and high-dose alprazolam.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
LC-MS/MS analysis of 13 benzodiazepines and metabolites in urine, serum, plasma, and meconium.
2010-01-01
[Methods Mol. Biol. 603 , 89-105, (2010)]
2010-01-01
[Methods Mol. Biol. 603 , 75-87, (2010)]
1980-10-01
[Igaku Kenkyu. 50(7) , 495-507, (1980)]
1987-01-01
[Psychopharmacology 93 , 105, (1987)]
1992-01-01
[J. Anal. Toxicol. 16 , 67, (1992)]