Life sciences
-
Opioid analgesics are frequently used for the long-term management of chronic pain states, including cancer pain. The prolonged use of opioids is associated with a requirement for increasing doses to manage pain at a consistent level, reflecting the phenomenon of analgesic tolerance. It is now becoming clearer that patients receiving long-term opioid therapy can develop unexpected abnormal pain. ⋯ Manipulations that have blocked enhanced pain and antinociceptive tolerance include reversible and permanent ablation of descending facilitation from the RVM. Thus, opioids elicit systems-level adaptations resulting in pain due to descending facilitation, upregulation of spinal dynorphin and enhanced release of excitatory transmitters from primary afferents. Adaptive changes produced by sustained opioid exposure including trophic effects to enhance pain transmitters suggest the need for careful evaluation of the consequences of long-term opioid administration to patients.
-
Herbal extracts of Hypericum perforatum L. (St. John's wort, SJW) are now successfully competing for status as a standard antidepressant therapy. Because of this, great effort has been devoted to identifying the antidepressive active compounds. ⋯ In the FST all three extracts decreased immobility time in a dosage of 500 mg/kg after acute as well as after repeated treatment. The present results clearly show that an SJW extract free of hyperforin and hypericin exerts antidepressant activity in behavioral models, supporting our working hypothesis that flavonoids are part of the constituents responsible for the therapeutic efficacy of SJW extracts. We also could show that hyperforin contributes to the beneficial properties of SJW extract, confirming the hypothesis that the crude SJW extract contains several constituents with antidepressant activity.
-
In this study, we evaluated the effects of intrathecally administered agonists of mu- and delta-opioid receptor and their analogs on the pain-induced behavior and expression of c-Fos immunoreactivity in the spinal cord, elicited by intraplantar injection of 12% formalin to the hindpaw of the rat. Previous report from our laboratory and other author's study indicated that intrathecal administration of mu agonists morphine and endomorphin-2 and delta-opioid agonist deltorphin II produced a dose-dependent antinociceptive effects in acute and inflammatory pain. In this study, intrathecal injection of morphine (10 microg), endomorphin-2 (5 microg) and its analog Dmt-endomorphin-2 (10 microg) significantly decreased the formalin-induced pain behavior, and lowered a number of c-Fos positive neurons in the laminae I, II and III of the spinal cord by about 40%, 30% and 40%, respectively. ⋯ Agonists of delta-opioid receptor significantly reduced a number of c-Fos positive neurons by about 28% and 40%, respectively. Analog of endomorphin-2 and analog of deltorphin II suppressed more potently expression of c-Fos in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord than the parent peptides. Our study indicates that new analogs of mu- and delta-opioid receptor exhibit strong antinociceptive potency similar or even higher than the parent peptides, and that their effect is positively correlated with the inhibition of c-Fos expression.
-
Oxygen free radicals have been implicated in mediating various pathological processes including burn-induced organ damage. This study was designed to determine the possible protective effect of aqueous garlic extract against oxidative organ damage distant from the original burn wound. Under ether anaesthesia, rats were subjected to severe skin scald injury covering 30% of total body surface area. ⋯ Liver, intestine and lung tissues were taken for the determination of malondialdehyde (MDA) and glutathione (GSH) levels, myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity and protein oxidation (PO). Burn injury caused a significant decrease in GSH level, and significant increases in MDA and PO levels, and MPO activity at post-burn 2 and 24 hours. Since garlic extract reversed these oxidant responses it seems likely that garlic extract protects tissues against oxidative damage.
-
The effects of night-time exposure to traffic noise (TN) or low frequency noise (LFN) on the cortisol awakening response and subjective sleep quality were determined. Twelve male subjects slept for five consecutive nights in a noise-sleep laboratory. After one night of acclimatisation and one reference night, subjects were exposed to either TN (35dB L(Aeq), 50dB L(Amax)) or LFN (40dB L(Aeq)) on alternating nights (with an additional reference night in between). ⋯ Cortisol levels at 30 minutes after awakening were related to "activity" and "pleasantness" in the morning after exposure to LFN. Cortisol levels 30 minutes after awakening were related to sleep quality after exposure to TN. This study thus showed that night time exposure to LFN may affect the cortisol response upon wake up and that lower cortisol levels after awakening were associated with subjective reports of lower sleep quality and mood.