Life sciences
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Comparative Study
Decreases in nestlet shredding of mice by serotonin uptake inhibitors: comparison with marble burying.
Methods for detection of anxiolytic-like behavioral effects of serotonin uptake inhibitors are limited. The present study introduces a new quantitative method that permits dose-effect analysis of these compounds. Male NIH Swiss mice were given 60-min access to a piece of cotton gauze and the amount of material not torn into nesting material was weighed. ⋯ Both nestlet shredding and marble burying behaviors were generally consistent across five consecutive experimental sessions and fluoxetine did not produce any systematic trends over repeated testing. The methods should have utility in defining pharmacological effects of these compounds in vivo. Moreover, these data may be useful in the context of other behavioral effects when assessing the relevance of a compound for its potential therapeutic potential as an anxiolytic (nestlet shredding) or as an anti-obsessive-compulsive disorder agent (marble burying).
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The present study was undertaken to determine the effects of intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) and intraperitoneal (i.p.) melatonin on mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia in mice with partial tight ligation of the sciatic nerve, and how the nitric oxide (NO) precursor l-arginine and the opiate antagonist naloxone influence this effect. A plantar analgesic meter was used to assess thermal hyperalgesia, and nerve injury-induced mechanical hyperalgesia was assessed with von Frey filaments. 1-5 weeks following the surgery, marked mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia developed in neuropathic mice. ⋯ These results suggest that although it has different effects on neuropathic pain-related behaviors, melatonin may have clinical utility in neuropathic pain therapy in the future. It is also concluded that l-arginine-NO pathway and opioidergic system are involved in the antihyperalgesic effect of melatonin in nerve-injured mice.
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Our aim was to test for smoking-induced endothelial dysfunction in rat cerebral vessels, then to evaluate the effect of valsartan [angiotensin II type I (AT1)-receptor blocker] on that impairment. In pentobarbital-anesthetized, mechanically ventilated Sprague-Dawley rats, we used a cranial window preparation to measure changes in pial vessel diameters following topical applications of acetylcholine (Ach) (before and after smoking or intravenous nicotine infusion; n = 6 in each group), and adenosine (n = 6 for before and after smoking). Then, after intravenous valsartan pretreatment we reexamined the pial vasodilator response to topical Ach (before and after cigarette smoking). ⋯ Valsartan prevented smoking from impairing Ach-induced vasodilation. In conclusion, acute single-cigarette smoking causes a dysfunction of endothelium-dependent, but not endothelium-independent, vasodilation of rat cerebral vessels in vivo, and the effect was not mimicked by intravenous nicotine. AT1-receptor blockade prevented the above smoking-induced impairment of endothelium-dependent vasodilation.
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Drug combinations have the potential advantage of greater analgesia over monotherapy. The present study was aimed to assess any possible interaction (additive or potentiation) in the antinociceptive effects of etoricoxib; a novel cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, and tramadol; a typical opioid agonist when administered in combination against mechanical hyperalgesia induced by spinal cord injury in rats. The nature of interaction was analyzed using surface of synergistic interaction (SSI) analysis and an isobolographic analysis. ⋯ The SSI was calculated from the total antihyperalgesic effect produced by the combination after the subtraction of the antihyperalgesic effect produced by each of the individual drug. In the isobolographic analysis, the experimental ED50 was found to be far below the line of additivity also indicating a significant (P < 0.05) synergistic antihyperalgesic effect when etoricoxib and tramadol was co-administered to rats. The synergistic antihyperalgesic effect of etoricoxib and tramadol combination suggests that these combinations may have clinical utility in mechanical hyperalgesia associated with spinal injury.
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Opioid overdose, which is commonly associated with opioid induced respiratory depression, is a problem with both therapeutic and illicit opioid use. While the central mechanisms involved in the effects of opioids are well described, it has also been suggested that a peripheral component may contribute to the effects observed. This study aimed to further characterise the effects of the peripherally acting naloxone methiodide on the respiratory, analgesic and withdrawal effects produced by various opioid agonists. ⋯ Further investigation in female C57BL/6J mice using barometric plethysmography found that both opioid antagonists could reverse methadone induced decreases in respiratory rate and increases in tidal volume. Its effects do not appear to be strain or sex dependent. It was concluded that naloxone methiodide can reverse the respiratory and analgesic actions of a variety of opioid agonists, without inducing opioid withdrawal.