• Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. · Dec 2010

    Antinociceptive effect of ambroxol in rats with neuropathic spinal cord injury pain.

    • Aldric T Hama, Ann Woodhouse Plum, and Jacqueline Sagen.
    • The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL 33136, USA. ahama@med.miami.edu
    • Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. 2010 Dec 1;97(2):249-55.

    AbstractSymptoms of neuropathic spinal cord injury (SCI) pain include evoked cutaneous hypersensitivity and spontaneous pain, which can be present below the level of the injury. Adverse side-effects obtained with currently available analgesics complicate effective pain management in SCI patients. Voltage-gated Na(+) channels expressed in primary afferent nociceptors have been identified to mediate persistent hyperexcitability in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons, which in part underlies the symptoms of nerve injury-induced pain. Ambroxol has previously demonstrated antinociceptive effects in rat chronic pain models and has also shown to potently block Na(+) channel current in DRG neurons. Ambroxol was tested in rats that underwent a mid-thoracic spinal cord compression injury. Injured rats demonstrated robust hind paw (below-level) heat and mechanical hypersensitivity. Orally administered ambroxol significantly attenuated below-level hypersensitivity at doses that did not affect performance on the rotarod test. Intrathecal injection of ambroxol did not ameliorate below-level hypersensitivity. The current data suggest that ambroxol could be effective for clinical neuropathic SCI pain. Furthermore, the data suggest that peripherally expressed Na(+) channels could lend themselves as targets for the development of pharmacotherapies for SCI pain.Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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