IMPORTANCE OF PERIPHERAL SITES OF ANALGESIC ACTION
Project Number1R01GM058902-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderCOLLINS, JERRY
Awardee OrganizationYALE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (adapted from applicant's abstract):
The goal of this work is to conduct a systematic study of the ability
of centrally acting analgesic agents to produce analgesia by actions on
the peripheral nervous system. The study is designed to provide answers
to three questions: (1) What peripheral receptor systems among those
that modulate pain centrally are capable of producing peripheral
analgesia? (2) Is the peripheral analgesia produced by the systems
identified as efficacious in the periphery greater or less than the
analgesia produced by those same systems within the spinal cord? (3) Are
there additive or synergistic peripheral interactions between those
systems and between them and low doses of local anesthetics? Studies
will be carried out in a behavioral model developed by the investigator
which permits testing in both a normal and a hyperalgesic state. A
thermal injury to one hind foot is created in a rat under general
anesthesia and withdrawal latency to a thermal stimulus tested two hours
later. If hyperalgesia, considered as a difference >1.5 sec in
withdrawal latency between injured and uninjured paws, is present, the
animal is used for analgesia testing twenty-four hours later.
Hyperalgesia is again documented at this time. Drug injection into one
paw is carried out under halothane anesthesia, which is then
discontinued, and latencies to withdrawal measured every 15 minutes
after the animal awakens. Latencies of treated and untreated paws are
compared to detect systemic versus local analgesic effects. Agents to
be tested include agonists at cholinergic, opiate and adenosine A1
receptors, and antagonists at excitatory amino acid, NK1 and adenosine
A2 receptors. Attempts will be made to obtain and test new compounds
that do not cross the blood-brain barrier.
No Sub Projects information available for 1R01GM058902-01
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