Documentation scienceplus.abes.fr version Bêta

À propos de : Low nephrotoxicity of an effective amphotericin B formulation with cationic bilayer fragments        

AttributsValeurs
type
Is Part Of
Subject
Title
  • Low nephrotoxicity of an effective amphotericin B formulation with cationic bilayer fragments
has manifestation of work
related by
Author
Abstract
  • Objectives: Evaluation of nephrotoxicity of a novel amphotericin B (AMB) formulation with dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide (DODAB) bilayer fragments (DOD/AMB). Methods: Dose-dependent cytotoxicity of DOD/AMB was evaluated in vitro against cultured kidney epithelial cells in culture. For in vivo experiments, Swiss Webster female mice were injected intraperitoneally for 10 consecutive days with 0.4 mg/kg/day AMB in the form of traditional bile salt desoxycholate (DOC)/AMB or DOD/AMB. Body and spleen weight, and biochemical and histopathological data were obtained at days 11 and 180 after injection. Results: Nephrotoxicity of the novel formulation was lower than that of Fungizone (DOC/AMB), which is the traditional AMB formulation using DOC. Dose-dependent cytotoxicity of DOD/AMB was lower than that exhibited by DOC/AMB. At day 11, DODAB and DOD/AMB caused loss of body weight and increase in spleen weight, which were not observed for DOC/AMB, although the changes were reversible and weights returned to control values at day 180. Ten days after injection, biochemical parameters for hepatic and renal function remained unaltered. At day 180, renal cortex histopathology revealed leucocytic infiltration and moderate hydropic degeneration of the renal tubules in the DODAB and DOD/AMB groups, in contrast to more severe lesions observed for the DOC/AMB group such as tubular cystic degeneration and glomerular injury, which were absent for the former groups. Conclusions: The DOD/AMB formulation exhibited differential cytotoxicity and low nephrotoxicity, but there were also important aspects of general toxicity that will require evaluation with full-scale toxicity protocols.
article type
is part of this journal



Alternative Linked Data Documents: ODE     Content Formats:       RDF       ODATA       Microdata