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Dive into the research topics where Celia Alemán is active.

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Featured researches published by Celia Alemán.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1999

Effects of policosanol in patients with type II hypercholesterolemia and additional coronary risk factors.

Rosa Más; Gladys Castaño; José Illnait; Lilia Fernández; Julio Fernández; Celia Alemán; Virginia Pontigas; Magnolia Lescay

This study was undertaken to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of policosanol, a new cholesterol‐lowering drug, in patients with type II hypercholesterolemia and additional coronary risk factors.


Toxicology Letters | 1994

A 12-month study of policosanol oral toxicity in Sprague Dawley rats.

Celia Alemán; Rosa Más; Caridad Hernández; Idania Rodeiro; Eloisa Cerejido; Miriam Noa; Amelia Capote; Roberto Menéndez; Ana María Amor; Vivian Fraga; Vivian Sotolongo; Sonia Jiménez

Policosanol is a natural mixture of higher aliphatic primary alcohols. Oral toxicity of policosanol was evaluated in a 12-month study in which doses from 0.5 to 500 mg/kg were given orally to Sprague Dawley (SD) rats (20/sex/group) daily. There was no treatment-related toxicity. Thus, effects on body weight gain, food consumption, clinical observations, blood biochemistry, hematology, organ weight ratios and histopathological findings were similar in control and treated groups. This study supports the wide safety margin of policosanol when administered chronically.


Toxicology Letters | 1994

Toxicity of policosanol in beagle dogs: one-year study

A.R. Mesa; Rosa Más; Miriam Noa; Caridad Hernández; I. Rodeiro; Rafael Gámez; M García; Amelia Capote; Celia Alemán

Policosanol is a new chemical entity composed of 8 higher aliphatic alcohols obtained from sugar cane (Saccharum officinarum), L. wax, whose cholesterol-lowering effects have been demonstrated in experimental models, healthy volunteers and patients with type II hypercholesterolemia. This study investigated the oral toxicity of policosanol administered for 52 weeks to beagle dogs. Twenty-four beagle dogs (12 males and 12 females) were distributed randomly in 3 experimental groups (4 animals/group): a control and 2 treated groups receiving policosanol at 30 and 180 mg/kg daily (7 days/week) by gavage. No mortality was observed in any group. Overall, policosanol was well tolerated throughout the study and no toxic symptoms were observed. All groups showed similar weight gain and food consumption. Lipid profile determinations showed that policosanol decreased total cholesterol by 20% approximately from 8 to 52 weeks. Cholesterol-lowering effects did not wear off during the study, thus demonstrating the persistence of the effectiveness. Triglycerides and high density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) were not changed significantly. No blood biochemistry or histopathological disturbances attributable to treatment were observed. This study has shown that no drug-related toxicity was induced by policosanol administered up to 180 mg/kg/day for 52 weeks to beagle dogs. Since this dose is approximately 620 times higher than the maximal recommended therapeutic dose (20 mg/day) it indicates a good safety margin of this product.


Toxicology Letters | 2000

Acute and oral subchronic toxicity of D-003 in rats

Rafael Gámez; Más R; Miriam Noa; Roberto Menéndez; Celia Alemán; Pilar Acosta; Haydee García; Caridad Hernández; Ana Ma Amor; Johany Pérez; Eddy Goicochea

D-003 is a mixture of higher aliphatic primary acids purified from sugar cane wax (Saccharum officinarum) with cholesterol-lowering and antiplatelet effects experimentally proven. The present work reports the results of two studies investigating the acute and subchronic oral toxicity of D-003 in rats. Oral acute toxicity of D-003 (2000 mg/kg) was investigated according to the Acute Toxic Class (ATC) method (an alternative for the classical LD(50) test), which was performed in Wistar rats. The results obtained in this study defined D-003 oral acute toxicity as unclassified. In the subchronic study, rats of both sexes were orally treated with D-003 at 50, 200 and 1250 mg/kg for 90 days. At this time, animals were sacrificed. No evidence of treatment-related toxicity was detected during the study. Thus, data analysis of body weight gain, food consumption, clinical observations, blood biochemical, haematology, organ weight ratios and histopathological findings did not show significant differences between control and treated groups. It is concluded that D-003 orally administered to rats was safe and that no drug-related toxicity was detected even at the highest doses investigated in both acute (2000 mg/kg) and subchronic (1250 mg/kg) studies.


Journal of Medicinal Food | 2001

In Vivo Genotoxic Evaluation of D-003, a Mixture of Very Long Chain Aliphatic Acids

Rafael Gámez; Jorge González; Idania Rodeiro; Ivonne Fernández; Celia Alemán; María D. Rodríguez; Pilar Acosta; Haydee García

D-003 is a mixture of very long chain aliphatic acids purified from sugar cane wax with cholesterol-lowering effects. The present study was undertaken to investigate the in vivo cytotoxic and genotoxic potential of D-003 using three established assays: bone marrow micronucleus, sperm morphology, and single cell gel electrophoresis (Comet) assay. In a first experimental series, CEN/NMRI mice (6-8 animals per sex per group) were administered D-003 by gastric gavage at 5, 50, or 500 mg/kg for 90 days, then sacrificed 24 hours after the last administration. The effects on bone marrow micronucleus were evaluated only in female mice. D-003 (5-500 mg/kg) did not increase the frequency of micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes, nor the ratio of polychromatic to normochromatic erythrocytes, compared with the controls. The assessment of the effects on sperm morphology showed that D-003 did not change the sperm count or the frequency of all types of abnormal head shapes, compared with the controls. In a second series, the micronucleus assay was performed in mice of both sexes given 2,000 mg/kg for 6 days. Likewise, in this series, neither cytotoxic nor genotoxic effects were found. Finally, five male Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with D-003 (1,250 mg/kg) by oral gavage for 90 days, and Comet assay on liver cells was performed. No single-strand breaks or alkali-labile site induction on DNA was observed. These results indicate that D-003 does not show evidence of cytotoxic or genotoxic activity on either somatic or germ cells in rodents.


Current Therapeutic Research-clinical and Experimental | 1997

A comparative study of policosanol versus probucol in patients with hypercholesterolemia

Pedro Pons; José Illnait; Rosa Más; M. Rodríguez; Celia Alemán; Julio César Fernaández; Lilia Fernández; Mirta Martin

Abstract Thirty patients with type II primary hypercholesterolemia were enrolled in a randomized, double-masked, parallel, comparative study of policosanol—a newer cholesterol-lowering agent obtained from sugar cane wax—and probucol. Prior to randomization, all patients started or continued on a standard, first-step cholesterol-lowering diet for 6 weeks. Patients were randomized to receive either policosanol (5 mg twice daily) or probucol (500 mg twice daily) for 8 weeks. Both groups were similar at randomization. With policosanol, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and triglycerides decreased significantly by 18.0%, 22.7%, and 16.2%, respectively. In addition, policosanol significantly lowered the ratios of total cholesterol:high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) and LDL-C:HDL-C, by 20.8% and 25.5%, respectively. Probucol significantly lowered total cholesterol (7.8%) and LDL-C (11.8%), as well as the ratios of LDL-C:HDL-C (15.0%) and total cholesterol:HDL-C (11.4%). Neither policosanol nor probucol treatment significantly changed HDL-C levels. Both drugs were well tolerated; no patient withdrew from the trial. Adverse experiences reported were mild and did not differ significantly between groups. It is concluded that both drugs are adequate alternatives for treating patients with type II hypercholesterolemia, with policosanol being more effective than probucol in this short-term study.


Journal of Medicinal Food | 2001

A 6-Month Study on the Toxicity of High Doses of Policosanol Orally Administered to Sprague-Dawley Rats.

Rafael Gámez; Celia Alemán; Rosa Más; Miriam Noa; Idania Rodeiro; Haydee García; Caridad Hernández; Roberto Menéndez; Caridad Aguilar

Policosanol is a cholesterol-lowering drug purified from sugar cane. Previous toxicological studies have not demonstrated any policosanol-related toxicity, even with long-term oral administration at 500 mg/kg, a dose 1,724 times larger than the maximal therapeutic dose (20 mg/day) recommended to date. The present study was undertaken to investigate the oral toxicity of policosanol administered for 6 months in doses up to 5,000 mg/kg to Sprague-Dawley rats. Animals were randomly distributed in five groups (15 animals per dose per sex): a control and four groups given oral policosanol (50, 500, 2,500, or 5,000 mg/kg). Eight treated rats (6 males, 2 females) died during the study, five of them (4 males, 1 female) from among those receiving the highest dose (5,000 mg/kg). According to necropsy, all deaths were related to gavage manipulation of higher doses. Although the differences were not significant, body weight gain and food consumption in the groups receiving 2,500 or 5,000 mg/kg tended to be lower than in the control group. Nevertheless, no drug-related toxicity symptoms were detected. Analysis of blood biochemistry, hematology, organ weight ratios, and histopathological findings did not show significant differences compared with controls, nor any tendency with the dose. Therefore, the present study did not show any new evidence of oral toxicity of policosanol, and the findings observed were a consequence of long-term administration by gastric gavage of the highly concentrated suspensions needed to reach the higher doses. It is concluded that policosanol chronically administered by the oral route is safe and that no drug-related toxicity was demonstrated.


International Journal of Clinical Pharmacology Research | 1996

Effect of policosanol on platelet aggregation in healthy volunteers.

Suria Valdés; María de Lourdes Arruzazabala; L. Fernández; Rosa Más; Daisy Carbajal; Celia Alemán; Molina


Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2001

One-year dog toxicity study of D-002, a mixture of aliphatic alcohols

Celia Alemán; Idania Rodeiro; Miriam Noa; Roberto Menéndez; Rafael Gámez; Caridad Hernández; Rosa Más


Revista CENIC. Ciencias biológicas | 2000

Efectos del policosanol sobre las enzimas microsomales hepáticas en ratas Sprague Dawley

Idania Rodeiro; Celia Alemán; Rosa Más; Pilar Acosta; María D. Rodríguez; Rafael Gámez; Maribel Rodríguez; Haydee García

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Idania Rodeiro

Spanish National Research Council

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Lilia Fernández

Federal University of Pernambuco

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