ABSTRACT
1. A range of compounds structurally related to the centrally acting muscle relaxant mephenesin and to the chemical convulsant strychnine were synthesized and tested for their ability to alter the threshold pressures for the onset of high pressure convulsions in mice. 2. The ability of both groups of compounds to alter the threshold pressure for convulsions was found to be dependent on the nature of a simple molecular skeleton. Thus, compounds that possessed a negatively polarized group located both in the same plane as and some 4.5 A from an aromatic nucleus increased the thresholds whereas compounds with a positively polarized group at the same location reduced the thresholds. 3. These findings support the suggestion that pressure elicits convulsions via a selection action on a receptor protein complex rather than via some general perturbation of the lipid regions of cellular membranes.