Anesthesiology
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MK801, an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist, has recently been reported to attenuate tolerance to, and withdrawal from morphine. This study analyzes tolerance and withdrawal in a chronic intrathecal coinfusion model of morphine and MK801. ⋯ Chronic spinal MK801 attenuates tolerance to, and withdrawal from spinal morphine in a dose-dependent fashion, supporting the hypothesis that N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activity plays a role in the reorganization of spinal function produced by chronic opioid receptor activation. Chronic intrathecal MK801 appears to sensitize the spinal cord to intrathecal morphine.
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Recent evidence has suggested that the timing of administration of analgesic drugs could influence their efficacy by reducing the sensitization of the nervous system induced by the nociceptive inputs, but this concept of preemptive analgesia is still debated in both clinical and basic research. ⋯ These results show that a slight advantage of infiltration with bupivacaine before injury exists in this carrageenin model of acute inflammatory pain. However, this benefit is limited in time and bupivacaine did not have any preemptive analgesic effect.