• Eur. J. Pharmacol. · Nov 1996

    The local anesthetic, n-butyl-p-aminobenzoate, reduces rat sensory neuron excitability by differential actions on fast and slow Na+ current components.

    • R J Van den Berg, Z Wang, R J Grouls, and H H Korsten.
    • Department of Physiology and Physiological Physics, University of Leiden, The Netherlands.
    • Eur. J. Pharmacol. 1996 Nov 28;316(1):87-95.

    AbstractEffects of the local anesthetic, n-butyl-p-aminobenzoate, at a concentration of 100 microM, were investigated using the whole-cell voltage clamp on dorsal root ganglion neurons cultured from neonatal rat in a serum-enriched medium. During current clamp conditions, the drug either increased the firing threshold or blocked tetrodotoxin-sensitive and tetrodotoxin-resistant Na+ action potentials. These actions were reversible. Under voltage clamp conditions, inactivation of the Na+ current revealed the existence of 3 fast Na+ current components, termed F1, F2 and F3 (tetrodotoxin-sensitive) and 2 slow ones, termed S1 and S2 (tetrodotoxin-resistant). The local anesthetic shifted the midpoint potentials of Na+ inactivation curves for F1, F2 and F3 currents by 7, 21 and 6 mV, respectively, towards hyperpolarizing membrane voltages whereas it did not influence these potentials for the slow currents. The amplitudes of only F3 and S2 currents were reduced by n-butyl-p-aminobenzoate to 24 and 11%, respectively, of their control values. These results show that the local anesthetic has a differential mode of action on the 5 types of Na+ currents, which are apparently present in cultured sensory neurons. This differential action can play an important role in the selective analgesic effect observed after epidural administration of a 10% n-butyl-p-amino-benzoate suspension.

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