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1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 33(8): 949-56, Aug. 2000. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-265852

ABSTRACT

The influence of a chronically implanted spinal cannula on the nociceptive response induced by mechanical, chemical or thermal stimuli was evaluated. The hyperalgesia in response to mechanical stimulation induced by carrageenin or prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) was significantly increased in cannulated (Cn) rats, compared with naive (Nv) or sham-operated (Sh) rats. Only Cn animals presented an enhanced nociceptive response in the first phase of the formalin test when low doses were used (0.3 and 1 percent). The withdrawal latency to thermal stimulation of a paw inflamed by carrageenin was significantly reduced in Cn rats but not in Nv or Sh rats. In contrast to Nv and Sh rats, injection in Cn animals of a standard non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug, indomethacin, either intraperitoneally or into the spinal cord via an implanted cannula or by direct puncture of the intrathecal space significantly blocked the intensity of the hyperalgesia induced by PGE2. Cannulated animals treated with indomethacin also showed a significant inhibition of second phase formalin-induced paw flinches. Histopathological analysis of the spinal cord showed an increased frequency of mononuclear inflammatory cells in the Cn groups. Thus, the presence of a chronically implanted cannula seems to cause nociceptive spinal sensitization to mechanical, chemical and thermal stimulation, which can be blocked by indomethacin, thus suggesting that it may result from the spinal release of prostaglandins due to an ongoing mild inflammation


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Rats , Catheterization , Pain Measurement , Analysis of Variance , Injections, Spinal , Rats, Wistar
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 86(supl.2): 133-136, 1991. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-623955

ABSTRACT

Ammonium salt derivatives of natural allylphenols were synthesized with the purpose of obtaining potential peripheral analgesics. These drugs, by virtue of their physicochemical properties, would not be able to cross the blood brain barrier. Their inability to enter into the central nervous system (CNS) should prevent several adverse effects observed with classical opiate analgesics (Ferreira et al., 1984). Eugenol (1) O-methyleugenol (5) and safrole (9) were submitted to nitration, reduction and permethylation, leading to the ammonium salts 4, 8 and 12. Another strategy applied to eugenol (1), consisting in its conversion to a glycidic ether (13), opening the epoxide ring with secondary amines and methylation, led to the ammonium salts 16 and 17. All these ammonium salts showed significant peripheral analgesic action, in modified version of the Randall-Sellito test (Ferreira et al. 1978), at non-lethal doses. The ammonium salt 8 showed an activity comparable to that of methylnalorphinium, the prototype of an ideal peripheral analgesic (Ferreira et al., 1984).


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Mice , Rats , Safrole/chemical synthesis , Safrole/pharmacology , Safrole/pharmacokinetics , Eugenol/analogs & derivatives , Eugenol/chemical synthesis , Ammonium Compounds/chemical synthesis , Quaternary Ammonium Compounds/chemical synthesis , Quaternary Ammonium Compounds/pharmacology , Analgesics/chemical synthesis , Analgesics/pharmacology , Analgesics/pharmacokinetics , Pain Measurement , Molecular Structure , Rats, Wistar
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