336 resultados para glycosidation sur support solide
Resumo:
Dans ce travail de thèse, nous avons étudié les mécanismes d'action de deux médicaments connus pour diminuer la prise alimentaire et pondérale : la metformine et le telmisartan. Nous avons dans un premier temps étudié les effets de la metformine, un antidiabétique oral connu pour avoir des effets anorexigènes. Les mécanismes hypothalamiques potentiellement impliqués dans la modulation de la prise alimentaire par la metformine ont été étudiés dans trois groupes de rats : un groupe de rats obèses (DIO), un groupe de rats résistants à l'obésité (DR) ainsi qu'un groupe contrôle. A la fin de la période de prise pondérale de six mois, les rats DIO avaient des taux d'ARNm de NPY hypothalamique plus élevés que leurs congénères résistants et contrôles. Chez les DIO ainsi que chez les DR un traitement par metformine induit une baisse significative de la prise alimentaire accompagnée par une baisse du poids. Nous avons pu d'autre part constater que la perte de poids obtenue par un traitement de metformine était corrélée aux taux circulants de leptine avant le traitement. Cet effet s'accompagne d'une augmentation de l'expression du récepteur ObRb au niveau hypothalamique. Dans un second temps, nous avons étudié les effets du telmisartan, un inhibiteur du récepteur à l'angiotensine II ayant une activité agoniste partielle PPARγ. L'influence du telmisartan associé à la pioglitazone sur la prise alimentaire et pondérale a été examinée en étudiant leur effet sur les neuropeptides hypothalamiques responsables du contrôle de la prise alimentaire. Quatre groupes de souris soumises à un régime riche en graisse ont été formés : un groupe placebo, un groupe pioglitazone, un groupe telmisartan et un groupe pioglitazone-telmisartan. Le telmisartan a aboli la prise pondérale induite par une diète riche en graisse ou par un traitement de pioglitazone. Cette diminution était corrélée à une baisse de la prise alimentaire et de l'expression hypothalamique d'AgRP. Cette étude confirme donc les effets anorexigènes du telmisartan et démontre pour la première fois le rôle fonctionnel du telmisartan sur l'expression hypothalamique d'AgRP. English Abstract : In this work, we investigated the effect of two drugs known to have interessants effects on food intake and body weight. First we investigated the hypothalamic mechanisms potentially implicated in the modulation of feeding by the glucose-lowering drug metformin in three different groups of animals: diet-induced obese (DIO) and diet-resistant (DR) male rats as well as lean controls (CT). At the end of the high fat diet period, despite higher leptin levels, DIO rats had higher levels of hypothalamic NPY expression than DR or CT, suggesting a central leptin resistance. In DIO but also in DR rats, metformin treatment induced significant reductions of food intake accompanied by decreases in body weight. Interestingly, the weight loss achieved by metformin was correlated with pre-treatment plasma leptin levels. This effect was paralleled by a stimulation of the expression of the leptin receptor gene (ObRb) in the arcuate nucleus. Next we investigated the antihypertensive drug Telmisartan, an angiotensin II receptor blocker with PPARγ agonistic properties. The influence of telmisartan, of pioglitazone and of their association on weight gain and food intake was assessed by studying their effects on neuro-endocrine mediators involved in food intake. Mice were fed a high fat diet, weightmatched and randomized in four treatment groups: vehicle, pioglitazone, telmisartan and pioglitazone-telmisartan. Telmisartan treatment was found to abolish weight and fat gain in either vehicle or pioglitazone treated mice. This effect was accompanied by a decrease in food intake. The hypothalamic expression of the agouti-related protein and plasma leptin levels show also a decrease under metformin treatment. This study confirms the anorexigenic effects of telmisartan in mice fed a high fat diet, and suggests for the first time a functional role of telmisartan on hypothalamic orexigenic agouti-related protein regulation.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether nalmefene combined with psychosocial support is cost-effective compared with psychosocial support alone for reducing alcohol consumption in alcohol-dependent patients with high/very high drinking risk levels (DRLs) as defined by the WHO, and to evaluate the public health benefit of reducing harmful alcohol-attributable diseases, injuries and deaths. DESIGN: Decision modelling using Markov chains compared costs and effects over 5 years. SETTING: The analysis was from the perspective of the National Health Service (NHS) in England and Wales. PARTICIPANTS: The model considered the licensed population for nalmefene, specifically adults with both alcohol dependence and high/very high DRLs, who do not require immediate detoxification and who continue to have high/very high DRLs after initial assessment. DATA SOURCES: We modelled treatment effect using data from three clinical trials for nalmefene (ESENSE 1 (NCT00811720), ESENSE 2 (NCT00812461) and SENSE (NCT00811941)). Baseline characteristics of the model population, treatment resource utilisation and utilities were from these trials. We estimated the number of alcohol-attributable events occurring at different levels of alcohol consumption based on published epidemiological risk-relation studies. Health-related costs were from UK sources. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: We measured incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained and number of alcohol-attributable harmful events avoided. RESULTS: Nalmefene in combination with psychosocial support had an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of £5204 per QALY gained, and was therefore cost-effective at the £20,000 per QALY gained decision threshold. Sensitivity analyses showed that the conclusion was robust. Nalmefene plus psychosocial support led to the avoidance of 7179 alcohol-attributable diseases/injuries and 309 deaths per 100,000 patients compared to psychosocial support alone over the course of 5 years. CONCLUSIONS: Nalmefene can be seen as a cost-effective treatment for alcohol dependence, with substantial public health benefits. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: This cost-effectiveness analysis was developed based on data from three randomised clinical trials: ESENSE 1 (NCT00811720), ESENSE 2 (NCT00812461) and SENSE (NCT00811941).