Review of the histamine system and the clinical effects of H(1) antagonists: Basis for a new model for understanding the effects of insomnia medications

Krystal, AD; Richelson, E; Roth, T

HERO ID

1454270

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2013

Language

English

PMID

23357028

HERO ID 1454270
In Press No
Year 2013
Title Review of the histamine system and the clinical effects of H(1) antagonists: Basis for a new model for understanding the effects of insomnia medications
Authors Krystal, AD; Richelson, E; Roth, T
Journal Sleep Medicine Reviews
Volume 17
Issue 4
Page Numbers 263-272
Abstract The pharmacologic management of insomnia has long been dominated by agents that facilitate gamma amino butyric acid inhibition. These agents have served as the clinical model for understanding the pharmacodynamic effects of insomnia agents according to which sleep effects parallel plasma drug levels (pharmacokinetic effects). Agents with other mechanisms also exist for treating insomnia; however, their effects are less well understood. Many of these diminish the activity in one or more of the key wake-promoting systems. This review focuses on one such mechanism, blockade of the wake promoting effects of histamine via H(1) receptor antagonism. Although drugs with H(1) antagonist effects have long been available, this review was prompted by new studies of a selective H(1) antagonist, which provide the first indication of the effects that are specifically associated with H(1) antagonism. The findings do not conform to our long-standing model of insomnia agents in that factors other than drug blood level are needed to explain the clinical effects. We suggest a model for understanding these unique effects based on a review of the basic neurobiology of the histamine system. In addition to drug blood level, clinical effects reflect circadian variation in activity in the histamine system and other parallel wake promoting systems as well as factors such as pain and stress. We hypothesize that significant sleep enhancing effects are likely when the histamine system is relatively active and the activity in other parallel wake promoting systems is relatively minimal. Although the focus of this review is on the novel properties of H(1) antagonism, the principles that emerge from this analysis are most likely relevant to all agents that selectively block wake promoting systems, and as such, this review provides a new paradigm for understanding the effects of insomnia medications.
Doi 10.1016/j.smrv.2012.08.001
Pmid 23357028
Wosid WOS:000321094400004
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Insomnia; Antihistamines; Histamine; Pharmacology