J. Clement
Apr 1, 1982
Citations
4
Influential Citations
124
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Biochemical pharmacology
Abstract
HI-6, ([[[(4-aminocarbonyl)pyridino]methoxy]methyl]-2-] (hydroxyimino)methyl]-pyridinium dichloride), is an oxime which, when combined with atropine, is an extremely effective therapy against organophosphate poisoning. It was found that, following soman (287 micrograms/kg) poisoning, HI-6 reactivated acetylcholinesterase in the diaphragm and intercostal muscles but not in the brain. At a lower dose of soman (110 micrograms/kg), HI-6 reactivated sarin-inhibited acetylcholinesterase in the brain and in the respiratory musculature but did not reactivate tabun-inhibited acetylcholinesterase. It was also found that soman produced a differential inhibition of diaphragm and intercostal muscle acetylcholinesterase in vivo, whereas the in vitro I50 for soman was the same in both areas. HI-6 was capable of reactivating soman-inhibited acetylcholinesterase when administered up to 30 min post-soman, indicating that the rate of aging of the soman-acetylcholinesterase complex is slower than previously reported. The above results suggest that, in severe soman poisoning, the primary lesion occurs in peripheral acetylcholinesterase in the respiratory musculature (specifically the diaphragm).