Zimelidine, a bicyclic compound with a strong effect on the neuronal reuptake of 5-hydroxy-tryptamine and with weak anticholinergic actions, was evaluated for its antidepressant efficacy in a double-blind comparative trial with amitriptyline. In doses of 200 mg a day it was found to be as effective as 150 mg amitriptyline, but with significantly less subjective side-effects. The plasma concentration of zimelidine and its metabolite, norzimelidine, showed no significant correlation with therapeutic outcome.
The degradation of chondroitin 4-[(35)S]sulphate isolated from chick-embryo cartilage was studied in the rat by experiments on free-range animals, on wholly anaesthetized animals with ureter cannulae, by perfusion of isolated liver, by whole-body radioautography and by isolation of liver lysosomes. After injection into rats 68% of the radioactivity was recovered in the urine after 24h, approximately one-half of this being in the form of low-molecular-weight material, chiefly inorganic sulphate. Cannulation experiments demonstrated that the proportion of low-molecular-weight components excreted in the urine increased with time until, after 12h, virtually all was inorganic sulphate. Whole-body radioautography identified the liver as the major site of radioisotope accumulation after injection of labelled polysaccharide. Perfusion through isolated liver indicated that this organ has the ability to metabolize the polymer with the release of low-molecular-weight products, principally inorganic sulphate. Incubation of a lysosomal fraction prepared from rat liver after injection of chondroitin 4-[(35)S]sulphate gave rise to degradation products of low molecular weight, and experiments in vitro with rat liver lysosomes confirmed that these organelles are capable of the entire degradative process from chondroitin sulphate to free inorganic sulphate.
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