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Modafinil [2-[(diphenylmethyl)sulfinyl]acetamide] and circadian rhythms in syrian hamsters: assessment of the chronobiotic potential of a novel alerting compound.

Authors :
Webb IC
Pollock MS
Mistlberger RE
Source :
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics [J Pharmacol Exp Ther] 2006 May; Vol. 317 (2), pp. 882-9. Date of Electronic Publication: 2006 Feb 03.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

In Syrian hamsters, behavioral procedures for inducing arousal (e.g., running in a novel wheel or gentle handling) can shift circadian rhythms when applied during the usual sleep period ("subjective day") and can attenuate phase shifts to light during the active period ("subjective night"). This raises the possibility that drugs that affect behavioral state may have "chronobiotic" potential. We characterized the effects of modafinil (2-[(diphenylmethyl)sulfinyl]acetamide), an atypical alerting compound, on circadian rhythms in male Syrian hamsters. Electroencephalogram recordings and video observations confirmed that modafinil dose dependently increases wakefulness at the expense of slow-wave and paradoxical sleep with no increase in locomotor activity per unit of time awake. Despite inducing arousal, modafinil at these doses (150 or 300 mg/kg), administered in the subjective day or early or late in the subjective night, did not perturb circadian phase. Modafinil (300 mg/kg) also had no effect on phase shifts to light exposure either early or late in the night and did not alter the size of phase shifts induced by running in a novel wheel for 3 h during the mid-day. Modafinil (300 mg/kg) did, however, decrease by approximately 50% the amount of novel wheel-stimulated running, moving leftward the dose-response relation between wheel revolutions and shift magnitude. These results indicate that, in Syrian hamsters, modafinil alone has no significant chronobiotic efficacy. Nevertheless, this agent may increase the sensitivity of the circadian pacemaker to nonphotic stimuli and may thus have some potential as a tool for promoting clock resetting in combination with behavioral strategies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-3565
Volume :
317
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16461586
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.105.099010