Reduced cardiotoxicity and increased oral efficacy of artemether polymeric nanocapsules in Plasmodium berghei-infected mice.
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2018
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Resumo
Artemether (ATM) cardiotoxicity, its short half-life and low oral bioavailability are the major
limiting factors for its use to treat malaria. The purposes of this work were to study free-ATM
and ATM-loaded poly-ε-caprolactone nanocapules (ATM-NC) cardiotoxicity and oral efficacy on Plasmodium berghei-infected mice. ATM-NC was obtained by interfacial polymer
deposition and ATM was associated with polymeric NC oily core. For cardiotoxicity evaluation, male black C57BL6 uninfected or P. berghei-infected mice received, by oral route
twice daily/4 days, vehicle (sorbitol/carboxymethylcellulose), blank-NC, free-ATM or ATMNC at doses 40, 80 or 120 mg kg−1
. Electrocardiogram (ECG) lead II signal was obtained
before and after treatment. For ATM efficacy evaluation, female P. berghei-infected mice
were treated the same way. ATM-NC improved antimalarial in vivo efficacy and reduced
mice mortality. Free-ATM induced significantly QT and QTc intervals prolongation. ATMNC (120 mg kg−1
) given to uninfected mice reduced QT and QTc intervals prolongation
34 and 30%, respectively, compared with free-ATM. ATM-NC given to infected mice also
reduced QT and QTc intervals prolongation, 28 and 27%, respectively. For the first time,
the study showed a nanocarrier reducing cardiotoxicity of ATM given by oral route and it
was more effective against P. berghei than free-ATM as monotherapy.
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Electrocardiogram, Malaria, QT interval
Citação
SOUZA, A. C. M. et al. Reduced cardiotoxicity and increased oral efficacy of artemether polymeric nanocapsules in Plasmodium berghei-infected mice. Parasitology, v. 145, n. 8, p. 1075-1083, jul. 2018. Disponível em: <https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/parasitology/article/reduced-cardiotoxicity-and-increased-oral-efficacy-of-artemether-polymeric-nanocapsules-in-plasmodium-bergheiinfected-mice/6932F5098D21304208C64C96DF709932>. Acesso em: 25 fev. 2019.