European journal of pharmacology
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Pain is the most common physical symptom of cancer patients, with most patients experiencing more than one site of pain. Current treatments lack full efficacy. Based on the need for new approaches in that field the effect of systemic administration of lacosamide (SPM 927, (R)-2-acetamido-N-benzyl-3-methoxypropionamide, previously referred to as harkoseride or ADD 234037), a member of a series of functionalized amino acids that were specifically synthesized as anticonvulsive drug candidates, was examined in rats in a tumor-induced bone cancer pain model and in a chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain model. ⋯ Tactile allodynia and mechanical hyperalgesia were inhibited by lacosamide at 10 and 30 mg/kg. In contrast to lacosamide, morphine (3 mg/kg, s.c.) had no effect on mechanical hyperalgesia. Lacosamide is effective as an analgesic in a bone cancer pain model as well as chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain model in animals and even reduced hyperalgesia where morphine did not (3 or 5 mg/kg, s.c.).
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Neuropathic pain conditions can encompass a diverse constellation of signs and symptoms consisting of sensory deficits, allodynia and hyperalgesia. Animal models of neuropathic pain have enabled the identification of key pathophysiological changes occurring within nociceptive pathways as a result of injury, and serve an invaluable role for preclinical screening of novel analgesic candidates. We have produced the first systematic description of the development and maintenance, and the pharmacological sensitivity of nociceptive behaviours in four rat strains with different genetic background (outbred Sprague-Dawley and inbred Brown Norway, Lewis and Fischer 344 rats), using the spared nerve injury model of peripheral neuropathic pain. ⋯ Morphine (6 but not 3 mg/kg, s.c.) and gabapentin (100 but not 50 mg/kg, s.c.) had significant antiallodynic and antihyperalgesic actions in all four strains after spared nerve injury, although marked differences in potency across strains were observed. Two strains (Fischer 344 rats and Lewis) were insensitive to the antihyperalgesic properties of gaboxadol (15 mg/kg) whereas gaboxadol (6 mg/kg) was equipotent to morphine (6 mg/kg) in two other strains (Sprague-Dawley and Brown Norway). The observed pharmacogenetic variations have important implications for the preclinical testing of drugs, and provide a basis for development of pharmacogenomics in neuropathic pain.
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Conventional thermonociceptive tests are based on measurement of the latency of nocifensive reactions evoked by constant, suprathreshold heat stimuli. In the present study, a novel, increasing-temperature water bath was developed for determination of the noxious heat threshold temperature of lightly restrained conscious rats. One of the hindpaws of a rat was immersed into the water bath whose temperature was increased from 30 degrees C at a rate of 24 degrees C/min until the animal withdrew its hindpaw from the water. ⋯ Morphine, diclofenac, ibuprofen and paracetamol administered intraperitoneally 20 min after heat injury dose-dependently inhibited the drop of heat threshold with minimum effective doses of 0.3, 0.3, 10 and 30 mg/kg, and ED(50) values of 0.5, 3, 18 and 100 mg/kg, respectively. Thermal hyperalgesia was also decreased by intraplantar treatment with morphine (10 microg), diclofenac (10 microg) or ibuprofen (100 microg). In conclusion, the mild heat injury-induced drop of the noxious heat threshold measured with the increasing-temperature water bath is a novel thermal hyperalgesia model highly sensitive to both opioid and non-opioid analgesics upon systemic or local administration.
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Comparative Study
Raloxifene inhibits transient outward and ultra-rapid delayed rectifier potassium currents in human atrial myocytes.
The selective estrogen receptor modulator raloxifene is widely used in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis, and has cardioprotective properties. However, effects of raloxifene on cardiac ion channels are unclear. The present study was designed to investigate the effects of raloxifene and beta-estradiol on transient outward and ultra-rapid delayed rectifier potassium currents (Ito1 and IKur) in human atrial myocytes with a whole cell patch-clamp technique. ⋯ The inhibitory effects of raloxifene and beta-estradiol on Ito1 and/or IKur were unaffected by the estrogen receptor antagonist ICI 182,780. Our results indicate that raloxifene directly inhibits the human atrial repolarization potassium currents Ito1 and IKur. Whether raloxifene is beneficial for supraventricular arrhythmias remains to be studied.
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The antagonism by Tyr-D-Pro-Trp-Gly-NH2 (D-Pro2-Tyr-W-MIF-1), a Tyr-Pro-Trp-Gly-NH2 (Tyr-W-MIF-1) analog, of the antinociception induced by the mu-opioid receptor agonists Tyr-W-MIF-1, [D-Ala2,NMePhe4,Gly(ol)5]-enkephalin (DAMGO), Tyr-Pro-Trp-Phe-NH2 (endomorphin-1), and Tyr-Pro-Phe-Phe-NH2 (endomorphin-2) was studied with the mouse tail-flick test. D-Pro2-Tyr-W-MIF-1 (0.5-3 nmol) given intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) had no effect on the thermal nociceptive threshold. High doses of D-Pro2-Tyr-W-MIF-1 (4-16 nmol) administered i.c.v. produced antinociception with a low intrinsic activity of about 30% of the maximal possible effect. ⋯ In contrast, endomorphin-2-induced antinociception is extremely sensitive to naloxonazine. The present results clearly suggest that D-Pro2-Tyr-W-MIF-1 is a selective antagonist for the mu2-opioid receptor in the mouse brain. D-Pro2-Tyr-W-MIF-1 may also discriminate between Tyr-W-MIF-1-induced antinociception and the antinociception induced by endomorphin-1 or DAMGO, which both show a preference for the mu2-opioid receptor in the brain.