Intravenous alpha-2-adrenergic receptor agonists reduce energy expenditure and lower the temperature when shivering begins in humans, allowing a decrease in core body temperature. Because there are few data about similar effects from oral drugs, we tested whether single oral doses of the sedative dexmedetomidine (1 µg/kg sublingual or 4 µg/kg swallowed) or the muscle relaxant tizanidine (8 mg or 16 mg), combined with surface cooling, reduce energy expenditure and core body temperature in humans. A total of 26 healthy participants completed 41 one-day laboratory studies measuring core body temperature using an ingested telemetry capsule and measuring energy expenditure using indirect calorimetry for up to 6 hours after drug ingestion. Dexmedetomidine induced a median 13% - 19% peak reduction and tizanidine induced a median 15% - 22% peak reduction in energy expenditure relative to baseline. Core body temperature decreased a median of 0.5°C - 0.6°C and 0.5°C - 0.7°C respectively. Decreases in temperature occurred after peak reductions in energy expenditure. Energy expenditure increased with a decrease in core temperature in control participants but did not occur after 4 µg/kg dexmedetomidine or 16 mg tizanidine. Plasma levels of dexmedetomidine but not tizanidine were related to mean temperature change. Decreases in heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate, cardiac stroke volume index, and cardiac index were associated with the change in metabolic rate after higher drug doses. We conclude that both oral dexmedetomidine and oral tizanidine reduce energy expenditure and allow decrease in core temperature in humans.
Keywords: Hypothermia; alpha-2-adrenergic drugs; dexmedetomidine; energy expenditure; tizanidine.
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