Lee Heeseung, Naughton Norah N, Woods James H, Ko Mei-Chuan
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, School of Medicine, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, South Korea.
Anesthesiology. 2007 Sep;107(3):478-85. doi: 10.1097/01.anes.0000278876.20263.a7.
Butorphanol is an opioid analgesic with partial agonist actions at micro- and kappa-opioid receptors (MOR and KOR). Previous studies have demonstrated that both MOR antagonists and KOR agonists are effective in alleviating intrathecal morphine-induced itch in primates. The aim of the study was to investigate the effectiveness of butorphanol as an antipruritic and to elucidate the receptor mechanisms underlying butorphanol's antipruritic effect in primates.
Adult rhesus monkeys were used in the behavioral assays for measuring itch/scratching and analgesia. The dose-response curves of butorphanol were studied using selective MOR and KOR antagonists. In addition, the effect of butorphanol as an antipruritic was studied on subcutaneous and intrathecal morphine-induced itch and analgesia. KOR-selective antagonists were further used to compare the degrees of MOR and KOR activation underlying the antipruritic effect of butorphanol.
Butorphanol alone produced analgesia with slight itch responses, and both effects were blocked by a MOR antagonist, clocinnamox (0.1 mg/kg). In contrast, a KOR antagonist, 5'-guanidinylnaltrindole (1 mg/kg), increased butorphanol-elicited itch. Systemic butorphanol (0.0032-0.032 mg/kg) dose-dependently attenuated systemic or intrathecal morphine-induced itch. In addition, butorphanol either potentiated or maintained morphine-induced analgesia without producing sedation. KOR-selective antagonists, 5'-guanidinylnaltrindole (1 mg/kg) and nor-binaltorphimine (3.2 mg/kg), only partially reversed the antipruritic effect of butorphanol with different durations of KOR antagonism.
Butorphanol is effective in attenuating systemic or spinal morphine-induced itch without reducing morphine analgesia. This study provides functional evidence that both partial MOR and KOR agonist actions contribute to the effectiveness of butorphanol as an antipruritic in primates.
布托啡诺是一种阿片类镇痛药,对μ-阿片受体(MOR)和κ-阿片受体(KOR)具有部分激动作用。先前的研究表明,MOR拮抗剂和KOR激动剂均可有效减轻鞘内注射吗啡诱导的灵长类动物瘙痒。本研究的目的是探讨布托啡诺作为止痒药的有效性,并阐明布托啡诺在灵长类动物中止痒作用的受体机制。
成年恒河猴用于测量瘙痒/抓挠和镇痛的行为学试验。使用选择性MOR和KOR拮抗剂研究布托啡诺的剂量反应曲线。此外,研究了布托啡诺对皮下和鞘内注射吗啡诱导的瘙痒和镇痛的止痒作用。进一步使用KOR选择性拮抗剂比较布托啡诺止痒作用背后MOR和KOR的激活程度。
单独使用布托啡诺可产生镇痛作用,并伴有轻微的瘙痒反应,且这两种作用均被MOR拮抗剂氯辛肟(0.1mg/kg)阻断。相反,KOR拮抗剂5'-胍基纳曲酮(1mg/kg)增加了布托啡诺引起的瘙痒。全身给予布托啡诺(0.0032-0.032mg/kg)剂量依赖性地减轻全身或鞘内注射吗啡诱导的瘙痒。此外,布托啡诺可增强或维持吗啡诱导的镇痛作用,且不产生镇静作用。KOR选择性拮抗剂5'-胍基纳曲酮(1mg/kg)和去甲二丙诺啡(3.2mg/kg)仅部分逆转了布托啡诺的止痒作用,且KOR拮抗作用持续时间不同。
布托啡诺可有效减轻全身或脊髓吗啡诱导的瘙痒,而不降低吗啡的镇痛作用。本研究提供了功能证据,表明部分MOR和KOR激动作用均有助于布托啡诺在灵长类动物中作为止痒药的有效性。