The Old and the New: Cardiovascular and Respiratory Alterations Induced by Acute JWH-018 Administration Compared to Δ 9 -THC-A Preclinical Study in Mice.
Beatrice MarchettiSabrine BilelMicaela TirriRaffaella ArfèGiorgia CorliElisa RodaCarlo Alessandro LocatelliElena CavarrettaFabio De GiorgioMatteo MartiPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Several new psychoactive substances (NPS) are responsible for intoxication involving the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Among NPS, synthetic cannabinoids (SCs) provoked side effects in humans characterized by tachycardia, arrhythmias, hypertension, breathing difficulty, apnoea, myocardial infarction, and cardiac arrest. Therefore, the present study investigated the cardio-respiratory (MouseOx Plus; EMKA electrocardiogram (ECG) and plethysmography TUNNEL systems) and vascular (BP-2000 systems) effects induced by 1-naphthalenyl (1-pentyl-1H-indol-3-yl)-methanone (JWH-018; 0.3-3-6 mg/kg) and Δ 9 -tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ 9 -THC; 0.3-3-6 mg/kg), administered in awake CD-1 male mice. The results showed that higher doses of JWH-018 (3-6 mg/kg) induced deep and long-lasting bradycardia, alternated with bradyarrhythmia, spaced out by sudden episodes of tachyarrhythmias (6 mg/kg), and characterized by ECG electrical parameters changes, sustained bradypnea, and systolic and transient diastolic hypertension. Otherwise, Δ 9 -THC provoked delayed bradycardia (minor intensity tachyarrhythmias episodes) and bradypnea, also causing a transient and mild hypertensive effect at the tested dose range. These effects were prevented by both treatment with selective CB 1 (AM 251, 6 mg/kg) and CB 2 (AM 630, 6 mg/kg) receptor antagonists and with the mixture of the antagonists AM 251 and AM 630, even if in a different manner. Cardio-respiratory and vascular symptoms could be induced by peripheral and central CB 1 and CB 2 receptors stimulation, which could lead to both sympathetic and parasympathetic systems activation. These findings may represent a starting point for necessary future studies aimed at exploring the proper antidotal therapy to be used in SCs-intoxicated patient management.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- cardiac arrest
- left ventricular
- heart rate
- heart rate variability
- heart failure
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high resolution
- type diabetes
- high intensity
- brain injury
- diabetic rats
- endothelial cells
- skeletal muscle
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- bone marrow
- mass spectrometry
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- blood brain barrier
- sleep quality
- stress induced
- respiratory failure
- arterial hypertension
- ejection fraction