• 1 January 1975
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 1 (2), 217-228
Abstract
A single injection of fenfluramine (100 .mu.mol/kg) produced evidence of neurotoxicity in cresyl violet or silver stained sections of rat brain which was restricted to the serotonergic (B-9) cell group located in the ventromedial midbrain tegmentum. Reacting cells throughout this region exhibited an irregular shape and an intense staining of the cytoplasm, while in the caudal 1/4 of this region the reacting cells also exhibited a perineuronal space. These effects were greatly reduced in the rostral 3/4 of B-9 at 14 and 30 days after fenfluramine. In the caudal 1/4 of B-9 the neurotoxic actions remained prominent and included signs of cellular dissolution. These signs of an irreversible degenerative effect of fenfluramine on cells in the caudal 1/4 of the B-9 region were identical to those seen after p-CA [p-chloroamphetamine], while the effects in the rostral 3/4 of B-9 were not as prominent. The differential neurotoxic effects of fenfluramine and p-CA on cells in the rostral 3/4 of B-9 were associated with a differential effect on serotonin content of hippocampus and amygdala.

This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: