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Troglitazone

Troglitzone (Rezulin®, Resulin® or Romozin®) is a member of the drug class of the thiazolidinediones. It was introduced in the late 1990s but turned out to be associated with an idiosyncratic reaction leading to drug-induced hepatitis. It was withdrawn from the USA market on 21 March 2000, and from other markets soon afterwards. Troglitazone, like the other thiazolidinediones (pioglitazone and rosiglitazone), works by activating PPARss (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors).\nTroglitazone is a ligand to both PPARα and - more strongly - PPARγ. Troglitazone also contains an α-tocopheroyl moiety, potentially giving it vitamin E-like activity in addition to its PPAR activation. It has been shown (Aljada et al) to reduce inflammation: troglitazone use was associated with a decrease of nuclear factor kappa-B (NFκB) and a concomitant increase in its inhibitor (IκB). NFκB is an important cellular transcription regulator for the immune response.

Table of contents
1 References
2 See also
3 External links

References

\n* Aljada A, Garg R, Ghanim H, Mohanty P, Hamouda W, Assian E, Dandona P. Nuclear factor-κB suppressive and inhibitor-κB stimulatory effects of troglitazone in obese patients with type 2 diabetes: evidence of an antiinflammatory action? J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2001;86:3250-6.

See also

\n*
Thiazolidinedione\n* PPAR

External links

\n*
Diabetes Monitor article on troglitazone\n* RxList article on troglitazone Category:Anti-diabetic drugs

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