Unraveling the Role of Histamine, Prostaglandins, 5HT, and Antihistamines in Human Health

 

Role of Histamine, Prostaglandins, 5HT and Antihistaminics

Introduction

  • Histamine, Prostaglandins, and 5-Hydroxytryptamine (5HT) are important autacoids.
  • Play roles in inflammation, allergy, gastric secretion, neurotransmission.
  • Antihistamines counteract effects of histamine.

Role of Histamine

  • H1 receptors: Allergy, inflammation, vasodilation, bronchoconstriction.
  • H2 receptors: Gastric acid secretion.
  • H3 receptors: Neurotransmission.
  • H4 receptors: Immune cell chemotaxis.


Role of Prostaglandins
  • Synthesized from arachidonic acid via COX enzymes.
  • Roles:
    • Inflammation & fever (PGE2, PGI2)
    • Gastric mucosal protection (PGE2)
    • Uterine contraction (PGF2α)
    • Vasodilation/constriction

Visual: Pathway of prostaglandin synthesis.

Role of 5HT (Serotonin)

  • Found in GI tract, CNS, and platelets.
  • Functions:
    • Mood regulation
    • GI motility
    • Platelet aggregation
    • Vasoconstriction/vasodilation

Distribution of serotonin in the body.

Histaminergic Agonists

  • List:
    • Betahistine
    • Histamine phosphate
    • Impromidine (H2 selective)
    • 2-Methylhistamine (H1 selective)
    • 4-Methylhistamine (H2 selective)

Histamine - Mechanism of Action

  • Binds to H1, H2, H3, H4 receptors.
  • GPCR mediated responses:
    • H1: ↑ IP3/DAG → Smooth muscle contraction, capillary permeability.
    • H2: ↑ cAMP → Gastric acid secretion.

Histamine - Indications & Adverse Effects

  • Indications:
    • Diagnostic agent (asthma, gastric acid secretion test)
  • Adverse Effects:
    • Hypotension
    • Bronchospasm
    • Flushing
    • Headache

Antihistamines - Classification

  • H1 Antihistamines:
    • First-generation: Diphenhydramine, Dimenhydrinate, Hydroxyzine, etc.
    • Second-generation: Loratadine, Cetirizine, Fexofenadine, etc.
  • H2 Antihistamines:
    • Ranitidine, Famotidine (not focus here)

H1 Antihistamines - Mechanism of Action

  • Block H1 receptors competitively.
  • Inhibit allergic responses.
  • First-gen cross BBB → sedation.
  • Second-gen do not cross BBB → non-sedating.

First-Generation H1 Antihistamines

  • Drugs: Diphenhydramine, Dimenhydrinate, Hydroxyzine, Promethazine, Pheniramine, Cyproheptadine, Cinnarizine, Chlorpheniramine, Triprolidine.
  • Uses: Allergy, motion sickness, insomnia, nausea.
  • Adverse Effects: Sedation, dry mouth, dizziness.
  • Drug Interactions: CNS depressants, alcohol, MAOIs.

Second-Generation H1 Antihistamines

  • Drugs: Fexofenadine, Loratadine, Cetirizine, Levocetirizine, Ebastine.
  • Uses: Allergic rhinitis, urticaria.
  • Adverse Effects: Less sedation, headache.
  • Drug Interactions: Ketoconazole, erythromycin (CYP450 interaction).
Presentation for Role of Histamine, Prostaglandins, 5HT, and Antihistamines in Human Health


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