Bumetanide - how a water pill can reduce autistic behaviours
Bumetanide
is a loop diuretic that has been used for adults since 1976 and in children
since 1986. It has recently been successfully
used to halt seizures in extremely young babies. The use of Bumetanide for the control of such
seizures was proposed in 2005 along with the suggested mechanism.
A
summary of that mechanism is that elevated intracellular levels of Cl- cause GABA to excite rather than inhibit inside
the hippocampus. But in the spinal cord
GABA is already known to be inhibitory.
As a result non-convulsive seizures can occur in very young
babies. Because the GABA in spine is
inhibitory there are no violent signs of convulsion, but in the hippocampus
there is a seizure going on.
Bumetanide
reduces intracellular levels of Cl- , it inhibits the NKCC1 transporter
so renders GABA inhibitory in the hippocampus . This action
alone has been shown to make the loop diuretic a much more effective anticonvulsant
than phenobarbital, which can actually exacerbate
the seizure.
Research shows that during a brief period from just before to just after
birth, maternal oxytocin (see note * below) temporarily renders GABA inhibitory,
possibly by reducing NKCC1 activity.
Thereafter, GABA remains excitatory until GABA itself causes a switch
from excitation to inhibition of GABA by inducing expression of the mature chloride transporter, KCC2. KCC2
transports chloride out of the cell, thereby reversing the concentration
gradient of chloride.
Most anesthetic and indeed anticonvulsants are
GABAergic. It was found that giving such
an anesthetic to a very young rat actually stimulated it, since GABA was still excitatory
in the hippocampus. For the same reason
giving the GABAergic anticonvulsant phenobarbital to a young baby only makes its seizure worse.
Valium is also GABAergic and so when its use
in autitstic children demonstrates a stimulating rather than a calming role the
question then arose as to the possibility of that elevated intracellular levels of Cl- are
causing GABA to remain excitatory rather than inhibitory in the autistic brain.
The
logical question was than would reducing the level of Cl- trip
GABA back to being inhibitory and then this would manifest itself in measurable
behavioural changes.
This hypothesis was first tested in a small trial in 2010 and then in full randomized controlled trial in 2012.
Merci beaucoup M.Lemonnier pour votre contribution à la science de l'autisme !
This hypothesis was first tested in a small trial in 2010 and then in full randomized controlled trial in 2012.
Merci beaucoup M.Lemonnier pour votre contribution à la science de l'autisme !
Note
*Oxytoxin may sound familiar. It is in Phase II clinical trials as a treatment for autism.
Coincidence ??
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