Abstract
Recent studies from our laboratory have suggested that the ototoxic side effects of gentamicin are caused by a metabolized or ‘activated’ form of the drug. Furthermore, we have postulated that the activation proceeds via the formation of an iron-gentamicin complex and that this complex produces free radicals. The present study assessed the protective effects of free radical scavengers and iron chelators on gentamicin-induced ototoxicity in guinea pigs in vivo. Gentamicin (120 mg/kg per day for 19 days) caused progressive threshold shifts reaching 50–65 dB at 18 kHz. Co-therapy with different radical scavengers yielded results ranging from no protection (with allopurinol, dimethyl sulfoxide, benzoate, lazaroid U74389G) to a moderate attenuation of hearing loss (with mannitol, 4-methylthiobenzoate, WR-2721). This finding agrees well with previous reports of inconsistent effects of scavengers on aminoglycoside-induced ototoxicity although it should be cautioned that only a single dose and route of application was tested. Two iron chelators, deferoxamine and 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate, significantly reduced the gentamicin-induced threshold shifts to about 10 dB or less. Iron chelators markedly decreased total serum iron levels while gentamicin treatment alone had no influence. There were no differences in serum gentamicin levels among all treated groups. This study confirms that iron plays a critical role in gentamicin ototoxicity and suggests that iron chelators, which are well-established drugs in clinical therapy, may be promising therapeutic agents to reduce aminoglycoside ototoxicity.
Published Version
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