Background: There is substantial evidence that cholinomimetic drugs increase pain threshold. However, the profound side effects of these agents have limited their clinical use either as analgesics or as analgesic adjuncts. A delivery system that would assure a slow and sustained drug release may be of value in ameliorating the problem of untoward effects.
Methods: The acetylcholinesterase inhibitor neostigmine was encapsulated into multilamellar lipid vesicles composed of phosphocholine and cholesterol. Three doses of plain or liposomal neostigmine were administered by the intrathecal route to mice (n=8-10/group), and analgesic duration was quantified by tail flick test. The doses were chosen based on preliminary experiments, which showed the maximum tolerated intrathecal doses of plain and liposomal neostigmine formulation were 0.625 microg and 80 microg, respectively. Two other doses for each formulation were then derived by 1:1 serial dilutions. Results were compared using survival analysis.
Results: The median antinociceptive duration for plain neostigmine was 0.33, 0.99 and 1.0 h for the 0.115, 0.312 and 0.625 microg doses, respectively. For the liposomal formulation, the median antinociceptive duration was 1.0, 1.5 and 6.0 h for the 20, 40 and 80 microg doses, respectively.
Conclusions: Liposomal neostigmine provides prolonged spinal antinociception, and permits the safe administration of a relatively large dose, because drug is gradually released from the liposomal depot. This technology holds promise for the development of a clinically useful neostigmine formulation to provide spinal analgesia.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1034/j.1399-6576.2002.460116.x | DOI Listing |
World J Clin Cases
August 2017
Amlan Swain, Deb Sanjay Nag, Seelora Sahu, Devi Prasad Samaddar, Department of Anaesthesia and Critical Care, Tata Main Hospital, Jamshedpur 831001, India.
Although beneficial in acute and chronic pain management, the use of local anaesthetics is limited by its duration of action and the dose dependent adverse effects on the cardiac and central nervous system. Adjuvants or additives are often used with local anaesthetics for its synergistic effect by prolonging the duration of sensory-motor block and limiting the cumulative dose requirement of local anaesthetics. The armamentarium of local anesthetic adjuvants have evolved over time from classical opioids to a wide array of drugs spanning several groups and varying mechanisms of action.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anaesthesiol Scand
January 2002
Department of Anesthesiology, New York University School of Medicine, New York 10016, USA.
Background: There is substantial evidence that cholinomimetic drugs increase pain threshold. However, the profound side effects of these agents have limited their clinical use either as analgesics or as analgesic adjuncts. A delivery system that would assure a slow and sustained drug release may be of value in ameliorating the problem of untoward effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Pharmacol
May 1995
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, National University of Singapore.
Behavioural and neurochemical analyses were carried out to investigate the relationship between the antinociceptive activity of porcine calcitonin (pCT) and central cholinergic system in mice and rats. Behavioural studies revealed that the antinociceptive activity of pCT encapsulated in sulphatide-containing liposomes injected intravenously into mice was significantly inhibited by atropine sulphate, but not by atropine methylnitrate, and potentiated by physostigmine, but not by neostigmine. Neurochemical studies using rat brain synaptosomes showed that pCT stimulated synaptosomal sodium-dependent high-affinity choline uptake, which was found to be closely associated with acetylcholine (ACh) synthesis (50-60%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurochem Res
February 1989
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Florida School of Medicine, Gainesville 32610.
We investigated the effects of various phospholipids on the presynaptic levels of newly synthesized [3H]acetylcholine (ACh) in rat cerebral cortical synaptosomes. When administered as small unilamellar vesicles (200-500 A diameters) dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) reduced [3H]ACh levels in concentration and time-related manners, while increasing the efflux of labelled choline to a similar extent. The reductions in synaptosomal [3H]-ACh levels induced by DPPC (3 mg/ml) were found in the cytosolic S3 but not microsomal P3 fraction, arguing for a cytoplasmic, non-vesicular site of action.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), a specific activator of protein kinase C (PKc), were examined on the frog neuromuscular junction. The depolarization elicited by iontophoretically applied acetylcholine (ACh) was reversibly decreased by 20-60% when muscle fibres were exposed to 1-5 X 10(-7) M TPA. Liposome-delivered phosphatidylcholine (100 micrograms/ml) prevented this effect.
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