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Minerva Gastroenterologica e Dietologica 2003 September;49(3):211-6

Copyright © 2003 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

language: English

CCK1 receptor antagonist, dexloxiglumide: effects on human isolated gallbladder. Potential clinical applications

Maselli M. A., Mennuni L.


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Cholecystokinin is the main hormonal regulator of gallbladder motility. Dexloxiglumide, the active enantiomer of loxiglumide, interacts competitively with CCK1 receptors as determined in preclinical studies, such as specific radioligand binding assays or functional studies on isolated guinea pig gallbladder, where it inhibited smooth muscle cell contractions induced by cholecystokinin-octapeptide (CCK-8), the most prominent active forms of cholecystokinin. Dexloxiglumide has a potent antagonistic effect, of a competitive nature, on human gallbladder cholecystokinin type 1 receptors. In isolated human gallbladder, dexloxiglumide produced a concentration-dependent rightward shift of the cholecystokinin-octapeptide curve, without affecting its maximal response. Gallbladder motility was evaluated in clinical studies. Dexloxiglumide, orally administered to healthy volunteers at putative therapeutic doses, did not interfere with post-prandial gallbladder kinetics, despite an increase of fasting gallbladder volume. At present, dexloxiglumide is in an advanced stage of clinical research in gastroenterology. Overall, clinical observations suggest that dexloxiglumide may become an effective treatment in several gastrointestinal disorders. Moreover, the beneficial effects can be obtained without increasing the risk of gallstones formation, a potential hazard subsequent to the inhibition of gallbladder contractions and the resulting bile stasis. The potent and selective antagonist dexloxiglumide may offer a possible therapeutic tool for use not only in functional gastrointestinal disorders, such as irritable bowel syndrome, constipation, gastroesophageal reflux disease and functional dyspepsia, but also in other pathologies, such as biliary colics, pancreatic diseases and gastrointestinal tumors.

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