Basic & clinical pharmacology & toxicology
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Basic Clin. Pharmacol. Toxicol. · May 2005
Comparative StudyEffect of local anaesthesia on neuronal c-fos expression in the spinal dorsal horn and hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus after surgery in rats.
The surgical stress response is the neurophysiologic reflex response to surgery, which involves activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and is regulated by the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus. The effect of pre-operative use of local anaesthetics on activation of neurones in the paraventricular nucleus during surgery was studied by quantification of the neuronal expression of the c-fos-gene after a standardized plantar incision in rats. Furthermore, c-fos expression in the spinal dorsal horn was used as a measure of spinal nociception. ⋯ Local anaesthetics reduced this number to 2029+/-919 (P<0.05), which was not significantly different from the anaesthesia control group. After surgery, the number of neurones with Fos-like immunoreactivity in paraventricular nucleus increased from 2948+/-1365 in the anaesthetized control group to 5550+/-3875 and 5191+/-1558 in the surgery and local anaesthetics plus surgery group, respectively, although significance was only reached for the group receiving local anaesthetics (P<0.05). In conclusion, preoperative local anaesthetic infiltration did not reduce the surgery-induced c-fos expression in paraventricular nucleus after paw surgery in rats, although spinal nociception was reduced.
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Basic Clin. Pharmacol. Toxicol. · May 2005
The effect of ciprofloxacin and gentamicin on spinal morphine-induced antinociception in rats.
This paper investigates the possible antinociceptive effect of systemically administered ciprofloxacin and gentamicin and its influence on intrathecal morphine-induced antinociception. Using thermal nociceptive tests (hot-plate test and tail-flick test) and a motor function test (catalepsy test) in male Sprague-Dawley rats (n=5-9/dose), the following observations were made: ciprofloxacin administered intraperitoneally in the dose range 4-64 mg/kg demonstrated a modest antinociceptive effect in both nociceptive tests. Solvent of ciprofloxacin (intraperitoneally) and saline (intraperitoneally), given as a control, showed no effect. ⋯ These data show that intraperitoneal administration of ciprofloxacin and gentamicin produces a modest antinociceptive effect in the hot-plate test and tail-flick test. Ciprofloxacin, but not gentamicin, can interact at least additively to increased naloxone-reversible morphine intrathecal antinociception. Differences in the ability to penetrate the blood-brain barrier between the two antibiotics could explain the lack of effect from gentamicin in the hot plate and on morphine-induced antinociception.