Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Intrathecal Gabapentin Enhances the Analgesic Effects of Subtherapeutic Dose Morphine in a Rat Experimental Pancreatitis Model
View through CrossRef
Background
Morphine sulfate has long been used for analgesia, but clinical applications can be limited by side effects, tolerance, and potential for addiction at therapeutic doses. An agent that produces therapeutic analgesia when coadministered with low-dose morphine could have important clinical uses. The anticonvulsant agent gabapentin has been identified as having antihyperalgesic properties acting on the alpha2delta1 subunit of N-type voltage-activated calcium channels on dorsal root ganglia neurons. In this study, intrathecal gabapentin, which by itself is ineffective when administered spinally, was combined with low-dose morphine and tested in an acute bradykinin-induced pancreatitis model in rats.
Methods
An intrathecal catheter was surgically inserted into the subarachnoid space of male Sprague-Dawley rats. A laparotomy was performed for ligation and cannulation of the bile-pancreatic duct. Rats were pretreated intrathecally with artificial cerebrospinal fluid, gabapentin, morphine, or combined gabapentin and morphine 30 min before bradykinin injection into the bile-pancreatic duct. Spontaneous behavioral activity (cage crossing, rearing, and hind limb extension) was monitored before drug injection (baseline) and after bradykinin injection into the bile-pancreatic duct to assess visceral pain.
Results
Spinal pretreatment with up to 300 microg gabapentin alone was not effective in reducing hind limb extension in this model, but did restore some cage crossing and rearing behaviors. Spinal treatment with low-dose morphine reduced hind limb extension only. Spinal pretreatment with combined gabapentin and subtherapeutic doses of morphine sulfate resulted in restoration of all spontaneous behaviors to surgical baseline levels including elimination of hind limb extension.
Conclusion
Combined spinal administration of gabapentin and low doses of morphine significantly reduces pain-related behaviors in this acute rat pancreatitis model, whereas these agents were ineffective when used alone in this dose range. These data suggest that the alpha2delta1 subunit of the N-type voltage-activated Ca2+ channels is involved in transmission of this visceral pain, likely through effects on primary afferent endings in the spinal cord. Thus, gabapentin may be an effective adjuvant to initial low dose spinal opioid therapy for clinical management of visceral pain.
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Title: Intrathecal Gabapentin Enhances the Analgesic Effects of Subtherapeutic Dose Morphine in a Rat Experimental Pancreatitis Model
Description:
Background
Morphine sulfate has long been used for analgesia, but clinical applications can be limited by side effects, tolerance, and potential for addiction at therapeutic doses.
An agent that produces therapeutic analgesia when coadministered with low-dose morphine could have important clinical uses.
The anticonvulsant agent gabapentin has been identified as having antihyperalgesic properties acting on the alpha2delta1 subunit of N-type voltage-activated calcium channels on dorsal root ganglia neurons.
In this study, intrathecal gabapentin, which by itself is ineffective when administered spinally, was combined with low-dose morphine and tested in an acute bradykinin-induced pancreatitis model in rats.
Methods
An intrathecal catheter was surgically inserted into the subarachnoid space of male Sprague-Dawley rats.
A laparotomy was performed for ligation and cannulation of the bile-pancreatic duct.
Rats were pretreated intrathecally with artificial cerebrospinal fluid, gabapentin, morphine, or combined gabapentin and morphine 30 min before bradykinin injection into the bile-pancreatic duct.
Spontaneous behavioral activity (cage crossing, rearing, and hind limb extension) was monitored before drug injection (baseline) and after bradykinin injection into the bile-pancreatic duct to assess visceral pain.
Results
Spinal pretreatment with up to 300 microg gabapentin alone was not effective in reducing hind limb extension in this model, but did restore some cage crossing and rearing behaviors.
Spinal treatment with low-dose morphine reduced hind limb extension only.
Spinal pretreatment with combined gabapentin and subtherapeutic doses of morphine sulfate resulted in restoration of all spontaneous behaviors to surgical baseline levels including elimination of hind limb extension.
Conclusion
Combined spinal administration of gabapentin and low doses of morphine significantly reduces pain-related behaviors in this acute rat pancreatitis model, whereas these agents were ineffective when used alone in this dose range.
These data suggest that the alpha2delta1 subunit of the N-type voltage-activated Ca2+ channels is involved in transmission of this visceral pain, likely through effects on primary afferent endings in the spinal cord.
Thus, gabapentin may be an effective adjuvant to initial low dose spinal opioid therapy for clinical management of visceral pain.
Related Results
PERBANDINGAN SKALA NYERI PASIEN PASCA OPERASI SEKSIO SESAREA YANG DIBERIKAN MORFIN INTRATEKAL DENGAN MORFIN INTRATEKAL DITAMBAH KETOROLAK INTRA
PERBANDINGAN SKALA NYERI PASIEN PASCA OPERASI SEKSIO SESAREA YANG DIBERIKAN MORFIN INTRATEKAL DENGAN MORFIN INTRATEKAL DITAMBAH KETOROLAK INTRA
Abstract: Caesarean section is one of the most common procedures performed. It is estimated that 15% of births worldwide and 21.1% of those in developed countries occur via cesarea...
Clinical pharmacology of morphine in infants and children
Clinical pharmacology of morphine in infants and children
Morphine is used to treat pain, for treatment of opioid dependence, and neonatal abstinence syndrome. Morphine is modestly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract whereas after re...
Morphine 6‐glucuronide: a metabolite of morphine with greater emetic potency than morphine in the ferret
Morphine 6‐glucuronide: a metabolite of morphine with greater emetic potency than morphine in the ferret
The emetic potencies of morphine and its metabolite morphine 6‐glucuronide have been determined in the ferret by constructing dose‐response curves for mean total retches and vomits...
<b>EFFICACY OF PRE-OPERATIVE GABAPENTIN IN REDUCING POSTOPERATIVE VOMITING AND ANALGESIC REQUIREMAENT FOLLOWING PEDIATRIC ADENOTONSILLECTOMY</b>
<b>EFFICACY OF PRE-OPERATIVE GABAPENTIN IN REDUCING POSTOPERATIVE VOMITING AND ANALGESIC REQUIREMAENT FOLLOWING PEDIATRIC ADENOTONSILLECTOMY</b>
Background: Vomiting after surgery and pain are frequent adverse effects after pediatric adenotonsillectomy, which result in delayed recovery, dehydration, and analgesic misuse. Ga...
Runahead threads
Runahead threads
Los temas de investigación sobre multithreading han ganado mucho interés en la arquitectura de computadores con la aparición de procesadores multihilo y multinucleo. Los procesador...
Should Gabapentin Be Dose Adjusted: What are the Clinical Consequences?
Should Gabapentin Be Dose Adjusted: What are the Clinical Consequences?
Objective: To review the clinical necessity of renal dose adjustment of gabapentin. Data Sources: Medical literature (1966–February 2006, week 2) was accessed through MEDLINE, EMBA...
Dexmedetomidine Induces Microglial Activation and Modulates Microglial M1/M2 Polarization in Attenuation of Chronic Morphine Tolerance in Cancer Pain
Dexmedetomidine Induces Microglial Activation and Modulates Microglial M1/M2 Polarization in Attenuation of Chronic Morphine Tolerance in Cancer Pain
Abstract
The pro-inflammatory (M1) and anti-inflammatory (M2) status of microglial determines the outcome of neuroinflammation, which contributes to the pathogenesis of chr...
Driving and intrathecal morphine administration
Driving and intrathecal morphine administration
Since Belgian law recently set a limit to morphine concentration detectable in blood and urine while driving a vehicle, questions arose about the implications for the medical use o...

