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The combined effects of halothane and lamotrigine on excitatory postsynaptic potentials and use-dependent block in the rat dentate gyrus in vitro.
Authors:H P Frizelle  D C Moriarty  J J O'Connor
Institution:Department of Anesthesia, Mater Misericordiae Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
Abstract:Halothane affects synaptic transmission in the rat hippocampus with a 50% effective dose (ED50) correlating with clinical figures for minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration (MAC). Halothane dose-dependently suppresses glutamate receptor-mediated excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in the rat hippocampus. It also inhibits voltage-gated Na+ channels. The anticonvulsant lamotrigine acts as a Na+ channel antagonist and inhibits glutamate release after Na+ channel activation. Given their known similar sites of action, the combination of halothane and lamotrigine may alter the inhibition produced by either drug alone. Extracellular recordings of field EPSPs were obtained from the dentate gyrus in the presence of 100 microM picrotoxin (to block GABAA receptors). Stimulation at 30 Hz (200 ms, pulse duration 0.1 ms, six pulses) allowed us to investigate use-dependent block (UDB). Once a stable equilibrium was established, halothane and lamotrigine were administered via the perfusate, and recordings were collected. Both halothane (n = 12) and lamotrigine (n = 6) exhibited reversible inhibition of the EPSP (ED50 0.28 mM 1.2%] and 100 microM, respectively) at low-frequency stimulation. Slices (n = 6) exposed to halothane 0.2 mM (0.75%), then to lamotrigine, showed reduced sensitivity compared with lamotrigine alone. Halothane 0.2 mM potentiated the control UDB (Pulse 6:31% +/- 11% control versus 20.5% +/- 2.5% halothane 0.75%; P < 0.05; n = 6). Lamotrigine had no effect on control UDB. The combination (n = 6) did not alter UDB effects compared with controls or lamotrigine alone. Halothane may reduce the effect of lamotrigine on glutamate release, either at the receptor or via effects at the inactivated Na+ channel. The site of interaction requires further examination. Implications: The general and local anesthetic drugs halothane and lamotrigine act at both the glutamate receptor and the Na+ channels and, in our experiments, independently inhibited synaptic transmission at low-frequency stimulation. Although halothane potentiated control use-dependent block, lamotrigine had no effect. Halothane attenuated the inhibitory dose-dependent effects of lamotrigine on synaptic transmission at a low frequency. The clinical importance of this interaction in patients presenting for anesthesia remains unanswered.
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