Effect of drugs used for neuropathic pain management on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in rat sensory neurons

Standard

Effect of drugs used for neuropathic pain management on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in rat sensory neurons. / Bräu, M E; Dreimann, M; Olschewski, A; Vogel, W; Hempelmann, G.

in: ANESTHESIOLOGY, Jahrgang 94, Nr. 1, 01.01.2001, S. 137-44.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{8faa362ddb2f473a9ab9ff8106c1c1c7,
title = "Effect of drugs used for neuropathic pain management on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in rat sensory neurons",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) channels play an important role in generation and conduction of nociceptive discharges in peripheral endings of small-diameter axons of the peripheral nervous system. Pathophysiologically, these channels may produce ectopic discharges in damaged nociceptive fibers, leading to neuropathic pain syndromes. Systemically applied Na(+) channel--blocking drugs can alleviate pain, the mechanism of which is rather unresolved. The authors investigated the effects of some commonly used drugs, i.e., lidocaine, mexiletine, carbamazepine, amitriptyline, memantine, and gabapentin, on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na+ channels in rat dorsal root ganglia.METHODS: Tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents were recorded in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp method in enzymatically dissociated dorsal root ganglion neurons of adult rats. Half-maximal blocking concentrations were derived from concentration-inhibition curves at different holding potentials (-90, -70, and -60 mV).RESULTS: Lidocaine, mexiletine, and amitriptyline reversibly blocked tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in a concentration- and use-dependent manner. Block by carbamazepine and memantine was not use-dependent at 2 Hz. Gabapentin had no effect at concentrations of up to 3 mm. Depolarizing the membrane potential from -90 mV to -60 mV reduced the available Na(+) current only by 23% but increased the sensitivity of the channels to the use-dependent blockers approximately fivefold. The availability curve of the current was shifted by 5.3 mV to the left in 300 microm lidocaine.CONCLUSIONS: Less negative membrane potential and repetitive firing have little effect on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) current amplitude but increase their sensitivity to lidocaine, mexiletine, and amitriptyline so that concentrations after intravenous administration of these drugs can impair channel function. This may explain alleviation from pain by reducing firing frequency in ectopic sites without depressing central nervous or cardiac excitability.",
keywords = "Amitriptyline, Analgesics, Anesthetics, Local, Animals, Cells, Cultured, Diethylcarbamazine, Drug Interactions, Electric Stimulation, Lidocaine, Memantine, Membrane Potentials, Mexiletine, Neurons, Afferent, Patch-Clamp Techniques, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Sodium Channel Blockers, Sodium Channels, Tetrodotoxin",
author = "Br{\"a}u, {M E} and M Dreimann and A Olschewski and W Vogel and G Hempelmann",
year = "2001",
month = jan,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "94",
pages = "137--44",
journal = "ANESTHESIOLOGY",
issn = "0003-3022",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams and Wilkins",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effect of drugs used for neuropathic pain management on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in rat sensory neurons

AU - Bräu, M E

AU - Dreimann, M

AU - Olschewski, A

AU - Vogel, W

AU - Hempelmann, G

PY - 2001/1/1

Y1 - 2001/1/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) channels play an important role in generation and conduction of nociceptive discharges in peripheral endings of small-diameter axons of the peripheral nervous system. Pathophysiologically, these channels may produce ectopic discharges in damaged nociceptive fibers, leading to neuropathic pain syndromes. Systemically applied Na(+) channel--blocking drugs can alleviate pain, the mechanism of which is rather unresolved. The authors investigated the effects of some commonly used drugs, i.e., lidocaine, mexiletine, carbamazepine, amitriptyline, memantine, and gabapentin, on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na+ channels in rat dorsal root ganglia.METHODS: Tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents were recorded in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp method in enzymatically dissociated dorsal root ganglion neurons of adult rats. Half-maximal blocking concentrations were derived from concentration-inhibition curves at different holding potentials (-90, -70, and -60 mV).RESULTS: Lidocaine, mexiletine, and amitriptyline reversibly blocked tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in a concentration- and use-dependent manner. Block by carbamazepine and memantine was not use-dependent at 2 Hz. Gabapentin had no effect at concentrations of up to 3 mm. Depolarizing the membrane potential from -90 mV to -60 mV reduced the available Na(+) current only by 23% but increased the sensitivity of the channels to the use-dependent blockers approximately fivefold. The availability curve of the current was shifted by 5.3 mV to the left in 300 microm lidocaine.CONCLUSIONS: Less negative membrane potential and repetitive firing have little effect on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) current amplitude but increase their sensitivity to lidocaine, mexiletine, and amitriptyline so that concentrations after intravenous administration of these drugs can impair channel function. This may explain alleviation from pain by reducing firing frequency in ectopic sites without depressing central nervous or cardiac excitability.

AB - BACKGROUND: Tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) channels play an important role in generation and conduction of nociceptive discharges in peripheral endings of small-diameter axons of the peripheral nervous system. Pathophysiologically, these channels may produce ectopic discharges in damaged nociceptive fibers, leading to neuropathic pain syndromes. Systemically applied Na(+) channel--blocking drugs can alleviate pain, the mechanism of which is rather unresolved. The authors investigated the effects of some commonly used drugs, i.e., lidocaine, mexiletine, carbamazepine, amitriptyline, memantine, and gabapentin, on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na+ channels in rat dorsal root ganglia.METHODS: Tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents were recorded in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp method in enzymatically dissociated dorsal root ganglion neurons of adult rats. Half-maximal blocking concentrations were derived from concentration-inhibition curves at different holding potentials (-90, -70, and -60 mV).RESULTS: Lidocaine, mexiletine, and amitriptyline reversibly blocked tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) currents in a concentration- and use-dependent manner. Block by carbamazepine and memantine was not use-dependent at 2 Hz. Gabapentin had no effect at concentrations of up to 3 mm. Depolarizing the membrane potential from -90 mV to -60 mV reduced the available Na(+) current only by 23% but increased the sensitivity of the channels to the use-dependent blockers approximately fivefold. The availability curve of the current was shifted by 5.3 mV to the left in 300 microm lidocaine.CONCLUSIONS: Less negative membrane potential and repetitive firing have little effect on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na(+) current amplitude but increase their sensitivity to lidocaine, mexiletine, and amitriptyline so that concentrations after intravenous administration of these drugs can impair channel function. This may explain alleviation from pain by reducing firing frequency in ectopic sites without depressing central nervous or cardiac excitability.

KW - Amitriptyline

KW - Analgesics

KW - Anesthetics, Local

KW - Animals

KW - Cells, Cultured

KW - Diethylcarbamazine

KW - Drug Interactions

KW - Electric Stimulation

KW - Lidocaine

KW - Memantine

KW - Membrane Potentials

KW - Mexiletine

KW - Neurons, Afferent

KW - Patch-Clamp Techniques

KW - Rats

KW - Rats, Wistar

KW - Sodium Channel Blockers

KW - Sodium Channels

KW - Tetrodotoxin

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 11135733

VL - 94

SP - 137

EP - 144

JO - ANESTHESIOLOGY

JF - ANESTHESIOLOGY

SN - 0003-3022

IS - 1

ER -