- Source: Tropisetron
Tropisetron is a serotonin 5-HT3 receptor antagonist used mainly as an antiemetic to treat nausea and vomiting following chemotherapy, although it has been used experimentally as an analgesic in cases of fibromyalgia.
It was patented in 1982 and approved for medical use in 1992. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. It is marketed by Novartis in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea and the Philippines as Navoban, but is not available in the U.S. It is also available from Novell Pharmaceutical Laboratories and marketed in several Asian countries as Setrovel.
Pharmacology
Tropisetron acts as both a selective 5-HT3 receptor antagonist and α7-nicotinic receptor partial agonist.
Tropisetron have been shown to sensitise human α7-nicotinic receptors to low concentrations of acetylcholine, indicative of a possible co-agonist or other modulatory action of tropisetron at these receptors.
Adverse effects
Tropisetron is a well-tolerated drug with few side effects. Headache, constipation, and dizziness are the most commonly reported side effects associated with its use. Hypotension, transient liver enzyme elevation, immune hypersensitivity syndromes and extrapyramidal side effects have also been associated with its use on at least one occasion. There have been no significant drug interactions reported with this drug's use. It is broken down by the hepatic cytochrome P450 system and it has little effect on the metabolism of other drugs broken down by this system.
Other uses
As a biological stain and as trypanocide.
See also
5-HT3 receptor antagonist: Drug discovery and development
Zatosetron
Ricasetron
Bemesetron
Tropanserin
Granisetron
References
External links
Official site
Navoban data sheet
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Antimuntah
- Antagonis 5-HT3
- Reseptor serotonin
- Tropisetron
- ATC code A04
- List of drugs: Trj–Tz
- Antiemetic
- Serotonin receptor antagonist
- Ketamine
- MDMA
- 5-HT3 antagonist
- LSD
- Morphine