European journal of pharmacology
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The analgesic effects of opioid agonists and the expression of mu- and kappa-opioid receptors were compared between mice with herpetic pain and those with postherpetic pain induced by herpetic virus inoculation. Morphine inhibited herpetic pain more effectively than postherpetic pain. Intrathecal injection reduced the analgesic effects of morphine on postherpetic pain, but intracerebroventricular injection did not. ⋯ In the dorsal root ganglia, the expression of mu-opioid receptor mRNA was significantly decreased in mice with postherpetic pain, whereas the kappa-opioid receptor mRNA level was not altered. These results suggest that specific down-regulation of the mu-opioid receptor in the primary sensory neurons is responsible for the reduced analgesic action of morphine on postherpetic pain. The kappa-opioid receptor may be a useful target for the analgesic treatment of postherpetic neuralgia.
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We profiled changes in gene expression in the hippocampus 2 days after a 4 h general anesthetic with isoflurane and nitrous oxide. Eighteen month old Fisher 344 rats were anesthetized for 4 h with 1.2% isoflurane and 70% nitrous oxide (N=9) whereas control rats breathed 30% oxygen for 4 h (N=9). Rats were sacrificed 48 h later and RNA extracted from the hippocampus for gene expression profiling. ⋯ The majority of differentially expressed genes are implicated in cell stress and replication, signal transduction, transcription, protein biosynthesis, cell structure, and metabolism. The correlation between fold changes on array and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction was good (R2=0.85) for the 6 genes examined with both methods. These results demonstrate that in rats general anesthesia is associated with persistent changes in hippocampal gene expression, suggesting that recovery of the brain from anesthesia is considerably slower than generally recognized.