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Theobromine

About: Theobromine is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1137 publications have been published within this topic receiving 29723 citations. The topic is also known as: 3,7-Dimethylxanthine & Theobromin.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Maximum relative and absolute methyltransferase activities coincide with leaf emergence, when, as expected, the chemical defence has highest priority and the purine alkaloids (PuA) are allocated at peak concentrations.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A cautionary note is sounded about caffeine intake in pregnancy after a single oral dose of 5 and 25 mg/kg caffeine was administered to 20-day pregnant and non-pregnant rats.
Abstract: 1. The dispositions of caffeine and its immediate dimethylxanthine metabolites, theobromine, theophylline and paraxanthine were studied after a single oral dose of 5 and 25 mg/kg caffeine administered to 20-day pregnant and non-pregnant rats, respectively.2. Peak plasma levels were reached between 1 and 3 h in all fluids and tissues studied.3. The elimination phase, however, differed significantly between the pregnant and non-pregnant groups. For 25 mg/kg the plasma half-life (t1/2) of caffeine was significantly longer in the pregnant than the non-pregnant group; for 5 mg/kg the elimination rate of caffeine was similar in both groups.4. AUC values were used to compare caffeine and metabolite exposure in foetal tissues. At 5 mg/kg, peak concentrations for amniotic fluid, foetal blood, liver and kidney were not significantly different from one another. At 25 mg/kg peak levels in foetal liver and kidney were significantly less than those of foetal blood, amniotic fluid or placenta.5. Because of the observed ...

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that caffeine, other alkylated xanthines and xanthine itself share a spasmogenic action in guinea‐pig isolated trachealis which is best observed when the tissue is treated with indomethacin and maintained at 12°C.
Abstract: 1. Caffeine (10 mM)-induced relaxation of guinea-pig isolated trachealis was attenuated and converted to a small spasmogenic response on cooling to 22 degrees C. The relaxant response was restored on rewarming to 37 degrees C and was abolished by indomethacin (2.8 microM). Cooling to 22 degrees C in the presence of indomethacin revealed spasmogenic responses to caffeine which were abolished on rewarming to 37 degrees C. 2. Trachealis treated with indomethacin (2.8 microM) was repeatedly dosed with acetylcholine (ACh, 10 microM). Caffeine (1 or 10 mM), added as each ACh-induced spasm reached equilibrium, transiently augmented but then suppressed the spasm. On cooling from 37 degrees C to 12 degrees C, the increment in spasm evoked by caffeine increased relative to the spasm evoked by ACh. 3. Trachealis treated with indomethacin (2.8 microM) was repeatedly dosed with caffeine (10 mM). At 37 degrees C caffeine had little effect but it caused spasm when the tissue was cooled to 32 degrees C. Spasm amplitude increased as cooling progressed to 12 degrees C. Similar results were obtained with caffeine (1 mM). 4. At 37 degrees C, caffeine, enprofylline, 1,3,7,9-tetramethylxanthinium (TMX), theobromine, theophylline, xanthine and forskolin each caused concentration-dependent suppression of tracheal tone. Among the xanthine derivatives the rank order of potency was enprofylline greater than theophylline greater than caffeine greater than theobromine greater than xanthine greater than TMX. 5. In trachealis treated with indomethacin (2.8 microM) and maintained at 12 degrees C, the xanthines each caused concentration-dependent spasm. The rank order of potency was theobromine greater than or equal to theophylline greater than or equal to caffeine greater than or equal to enprofylline greater than xanthine greater than TMX. Forskolin was devoid of spasmogenic activity. 6. Trachealis treated with indomethacin (2.8 microM) and maintained at 12 degrees C, was repeatedly dosed with either caffeine (10 mM) or potassium chloride (KCl, 40 mM). Caffeine-induced spasm was attenuated in a Ca2+-free medium containing EGTA (2 mM), modestly at first but subsequently more profoundly. KCl did not evoke spasm at 12 degrees C but at 37 degrees C the KCl-induced spasm was virtually abolished at its first trail in the Ca2+-free, EGTA-containing medium. 7. It is concluded that caffeine, other alkylated xanthines and xanthine itself share a spasmogenic action in guinea-pig isolated trachealis which is best observed when the tissue is treated with indomethacin (2.8 microM) and maintained at 12 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A sensitive and reliable analytical procedure has been established for the detection of theophylline (TH), theobromine (TB) and caffeine (CA) in human plasma and urine by gradient capillary high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-frit-fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry (FAB-MS).

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review focuses on the role of UA in neuroprotection, as well as potential strategies aimed at increasing UA levels in the soluble range, and the potential therapeutic use of more water-soluble methyl-UA derivatives from the natural catabolic end-products of dietary caffeine, theophylline and theobromine.
Abstract: High uric acid (UA levels have been correlated with a reduced risk of many neurodegenerative diseases through mechanisms involving chelating Fenton reaction transitional metals, antioxidant quenching of superoxide and hydroxyl free radicals, and as an electron donor that increases antioxidant enzyme activity (e.g. SOD. However, the clinical usefulness of UA is limited by its' low water solubility and propensity to form inflammatory crystals at hyperuricemic levels. This review focuses on the role of UA in neuroprotection, as well as potential strategies aimed at increasing UA levels in the soluble range, and the potential therapeutic use of more water-soluble methyl-UA derivatives from the natural catabolic end-products of dietary caffeine, theophylline, and theobromine.

27 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202339
202288
202122
202036
201937
201840