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- Yun Gao, Changshui Xu, Kehua Yu, Guilin Li, Fan Wan, Shuangmei Liu, Jiari Lin, Han Liu, Jun Zhang, Xin Li, and Shangdong Liang.
- Department of Physiology, Basic Medical College of Nanchang University, Nanchang, Jiangxi 330006, PR China.
- Burns. 2010 Feb 1;36(1):127-34.
UnlabelledA burn is a severe injury, and the resulting pain can be very significant. Currently, opioids are the primary method of pain management, but these drugs have side effects; thus, it is of prime focus to research the mechanisms of pain formation and analgesic drugs.ObjectiveTo investigate the effects of tetramethylpyrazine (TMP) on burn pain mediated by the P2X3 receptor.MethodsFirst-degree and superficial second-degree burn models were used. The mechanical withdrawal threshold (MWT) and thermal withdrawal latency (TWL) were measured, and P2X3 receptor expression on nerve terminals in burn-injured skin were detected by immunohistochemistry. The effects of TMP on the P2X receptor agonist-activated currents in freshly isolated burn-injured rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were studied by whole-cell patch-clamp technique.Main ResultsOne hour following the procedure, MWT and TWL in first and second-degree paw-burns with normal saline (NS) treatment were lower than those in the unburned control group and lasted for 24 or 96 h, respectively (p<0.01). After 24 h, MWT and TWL in the first-degree paw-burn with TMP treatment were significantly increased as compared with NS treatment; no difference was found when compared to the unburned control group. MWT and TWL in the second-degree paw-burn in the TMP treatment group were significantly increased at 48 h compared to NS treatment. No difference was found with the values for the unburned control group after 72 h. On day 3 after the burn, P2X3-receptor expression in the nerve terminal in the burn-injured skin of the first- and second-degree dorsal burns in the NS treatment group was higher than those in other groups (p<0.05). After treatment with TMP, P2X3-receptor expression of the nerve terminal in the first- and second-degree dorsal burns of the TMP treatment group was significantly decreased. ATP-activated currents (IATP) on the DRG neurons of the second-degree dorsal burn in the NS treatment group were markedly higher than those in the second-degree dorsal burns in the TMP treatment group and the unburned control group (p<0.05); there were no significant differences between the second-degree dorsal burn in the TMP treatment group and the unburned control group (p>0.05).ConclusionTMP alleviates nociceptive transmission of burn-injury pain mediated by the P2X3 receptor.Copyright (c) 2009 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.
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