TopicNeuroscience
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5Total items
4ePosters
1Seminar

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SeminarNeuroscience

Ebselen: a lithium-mimetic without lithium side-effects?

Beata R. Godlewska
Clinical Psychopharmacology Research Group, Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Jul 1, 2022

Development of new medications for mental health conditions is a pressing need given the high proportion of people not responding to available treatments. We hope that presenting ebselen to a wider audience will inspire further studies on this promising agent with a benign side-effects profile. Laboratory research, animal research and human studies suggest that ebselen shares many features with the mood stabilising drug lithium, creating a promise of a drug that would have a similar clinical effect but without lithium’s troublesome side-effect profile and toxicity. Both drugs have a common biological target, inositol monophosphatase, whose inhibition is thought key to lithium’s therapeutic effect. Both drugs have neuroprotective action and reduce oxidative stress. In animal studies, ebselen affected neurotransmitters involved in the development of mental health symptoms, and in particular, produced effects of serotonin function very similar to lithium. Both ebselen and lithium share behavioural effects: antidepressant-like effects in rodent models of depression and decrease in behavioural impulsivity, a property associated with lithium's anti-suicidal action. Human neuropsychological studies support an antidepressant profile for ebselen based on its positive impact on emotional processing and reward seeking. Our group currently is exploring ebselen’s effects in patients with mood disorders. A completed ‘add-on’ clinical trial in mania showed ebselen’s superiority over placebo after three weeks of treatment. Our ongoing experimental research explores ebselen’s antidepressant profile in patients with treatment resistant depression. If successful, this will lead to a clinical trial of ebselen as an antidepressant augmentation agent, similar to lithium.

ePosterNeuroscience

Chronic Lithium administration in the Twitcher mouse

Ambra Del Grosso, Gabriele Parlanti, Lucia Angella, Nadia Giordano, Ilaria Tonazzini, Elisa Ottalagana, Sara Carpi, Roberta M. Pellegrino, Husam B. Alabed, Carla Emiliani, Matteo Caleo, Marco Cecchini
ePosterNeuroscience

Cytoskeleton regulation as possible critical hub of lithium response in patients with bipolar disorder

Alejandra Delgado Sequera, Clara García-Mompó, M.C Durán-Ruiz, Juan Manuel Montesinos, José Ildefonso Pérez-Revuelta, Cristina Romero López-Alberca, Andrés Caballero García, Antonio Martín-Mateos, Francisco González-Saiz, Antonio Trujillo-Vera, Manuel Rodríguez-Iglesias, Patricia Robledo, Víctor Pérez, Esther Berrocoso, María Hidalgo Figueroa
ePosterNeuroscience

Alterations of specific metabolites during epileptogenesis in plasma of rats with lithium-pilocarpine-induced temporal lobe epilepsy

Fatma Merve Antmen, Emir Matpan, Ekin Dongel Dayanc, Eylem Ozge Savas, Yunus Eken, Dilan Acar, Alara Ak, Begum Ozefe, Damla Sakar, Ufuk Canozer, Sehla Nurefsan Sancak, Ozkan Ozdemir, Osman Ugur Sezerman, Ahmet Tarik Baykal, Mustafa Serteser, Guldal Suyen

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Mechanisms of lithium-induced thirst

Dejiao Xu, Wang Xihua, Wang Binyou, Meng Tong, Bao Jin

FENS Forum 2024

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