Tramadol as a Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel Blocker of Peripheral Sodium Channels Na1.7 and Na1.5.

Biomol Ther (Seoul)

BK21-4th and Integrated Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, College of Pharmacy, The Catholic University of Korea, Bucheon 14662, Republic of Korea.

Published: March 2023

Tramadol is an opioid analog used to treat chronic and acute pain. Intradermal injections of tramadol at hundreds of millimoles have been shown to produce a local anesthetic effect. We used the whole-cell patch-clamp technique in this study to investigate whether tramadol blocks the sodium current in HEK293 cells, which stably express the pain threshold sodium channel Na1.7 or the cardiac sodium channel Na1.5. The half-maximal inhibitory concentration of tramadol was 0.73 mM for Na1.7 and 0.43 mM for Na1.5 at a holding potential of -100 mV. The blocking effects of tramadol were completely reversible. Tramadol shifted the steady-state inactivation curves of Na1.7 and Na1.5 toward hyperpolarization. Tramadol also slowed the recovery rate from the inactivation of Na1.7 and Na1.5 and induced stronger use-dependent inhibition. Because the mean plasma concentration of tramadol upon oral administration is lower than its mean blocking concentration of sodium channels in this study, it is unlikely that tramadol in plasma will have an analgesic effect by blocking Na1.7 or show cardiotoxicity by blocking Na1.5. However, tramadol could act as a local anesthetic when used at a concentration of several hundred millimoles by intradermal injection and as an antiarrhythmic when injected intravenously at a similar dose, as does lidocaine.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9970842PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4062/biomolther.2023.002DOI Listing

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