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Friday 21 September 2012

Quarryman's headache: clues to drug discovery

Chemist Ascanio Sobrero

@HealthMed Glyceryl trinitrate - GTN (discovered by Italian chemist Ascanio Sobrero in 1846-1847) - is widely used to prevent or reduce angina, a key warning symptom of coronary heart disease. 
An early clue that GTN might have medicinal properties came from the observation that handling the chemical could result in severe headache. GTN is also known as nitroglycerine, an important component in early explosives.  Workers in early munitions factories developed vascular headaches. And quarrymen handling nitroglycerine-based explosives were also at risk of such severe headaches that resignation may have been preferrable to recurrent onset of these severe symptoms. 
This lead to trials of GTN in angina by Dr William Murrell, with publication of results in 1879 in the UK medical journal The Lancet, followed by increasing popularity in use of GTN as treatment. 
The major beneficial effects of GTN are due to relaxation of veins, so reducing the filling pressure in the heart. This in turn, through Starling's Law of the Heart, reduces the work of the main pumps of the heart, the ventricles. Nitric oxide is a vasodilator made in the body by the cells that line blood vessels, endothelial cells: work on this pathway resulted in the award of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 1998 to Robert F Furchgott, Louis J Ignarro and Ferid Murad for their discoveries concerning "the nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system". 
Anti-anginal effects of GTN result from the dilator response of veins to the additional nitric oxide generated from the GTN by vascular enzymes (including mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase). And this effect on veins occurs at a lower concentration of the drug than needed to relax arteries. Headache as an unwanted side effect of the drug is due to an increase in blood flow in arteries in the head.  The chance of arterial headache developing can thus be minimised by spitting out any remaining GTN once angina has settled.

Footnote
There had been an earlier report in The Lancet in 1867 by Dr T. Lauder Brunton from Edinburgh on use of an organic nitrite, amyl nitrite, to treat angina. There is now evidence that nitrite may act as a chemical signal, independent of its vasodilator and other effects through conversion to nitric oxide.

William Murrell's 1879 Lancet paper.

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