
An overweight patient is seen at a weight loss hospital in a file photo. (Andrew Wong/Reuters)
- WEDNESDAY, Aug. 20 (HealthDay News) — Vigabatrin, a medication
that holds potential as a treatment for drug addiction, has been found to
cause rapid weight loss in animals.
A study done by U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National
Laboratory found that animals bred to be obese lost up to 19 percent of
their total weight while non-obese animals lost 12 percent to 20 percent
after being on vigabatrin for a short time.
“Our results appear to demonstrate that vigabatrin induced satiety in
these animals,” study leader Amy DeMarco, of the Brookhaven laboratory,
said in a DOE news release.
The study was published online Aug. 20 in the journal
Synapse.
Vigabatrin is in U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved Phase
II clinical trials as a possible treatment to break cocaine and
methamphetamine addiction.
Brookhaven researchers have previously uncovered a strong link between
obesity and addiction, including similar changes in the brains of the
obese and cocaine addicts. That lead to tests in which 50 genetically bred
“fat” and normal-weight animals were regularly either dosed with various
amounts of vigabatrin or a placebo for up to 40 days.
At the end of the experiment, all the animals given vigabatrin weighed
significantly less and had consumed less food than the controls.
“The fact that these results occurred in genetically obese animals
offers hope that this drug could potentially treat severe obesity,”
Stephen Dewey, who has conducted more than 20 years of preclinical
research with this medication, said in a lab release. “This would appear
to be true even if the obesity results from binge eating, as this disorder
is characterized by eating patterns that are similar to drug-taking
patterns in those with cocaine dependency.”
More information
The Partnership for a Drug-Free America has more about understanding drug addiction.
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