Strichartz G
Anesthesiology. 1976 Oct;45(4):421-41. doi: 10.1097/00000542-197610000-00012.
Local anesthetics block nerve conduction by preventing the increase in membrane permeability to sodium ions that normally leads to a nerve impulse. Among anesthetics containing tertiary amine groups, the cationic, protonated form appears to be more active than the neutral form. However, the neutral forms, as well as uncharged molecules like benzocaine and the aliphatic alcohols, also depress sodium permeability. Studies of single myelinated nerves and squid axons show no direct interaction between calcium ions and local anesthetics, thus disproving theories based on competition between these two agents. Likewise, hypotheses attributing local anesthesia to changes in electrical potentials at the membrane-water interface are disproven by the demonstrated potencies of electrically uncharged anesthetics. Hypotheses that propose that local anesthetics act by expanding the nerve membrane and causing a change in protein conformation that blocks sodium permeability are vague in conception and difficult to test experimentally. Evidence from voltage-clamp studies of single nerve fibers indicates that anesthetic molecules interact with the sodium channels directly, from the inner side of the nerve membrane. Anesthetics bind within sodium channels which have opened during membrane depolarization, preventing the normal sodium ion flux. Anesthetic molecules can dissociate from open channels, but not from channels that remain closed when the nerve is kept at rest. The "gating" properties that regulate the opening and closing of sodium channels are reversibly modified during anesthesia. Specifically, the inactivation function responds more slowly and requires more negative membrane potential changes to reach the same values as in unanesthetized nerves. A second, slow inactivation is observed following external application of tertiary amine anesthetics. The selective binding of anesthetics to open sodium channels provides a simple explanation for Wedenski inhibition, in which the block increases with the frequency of nerve impulses. When impulses occur at higher frequencies more sodium channels are open over a period of time comparable to the time necessary for the anesthetic binding reaction, thus more channels are blocked. In addition the changes of the inactivation function result in a longer refractory period and, thus, a decrease of impulse height at higher frequencies. Charged anesthetic molecules may bind in the pore of the sodium channel. Their binding can be modulated by the electrical field in the membrane. The channel has a higher affinity for larger anesthetic molecules, but this may result from their greater hydrophobicity as well as from their size. The binding site favors molecules that contain more polar linkages between the amine group and the aromatic residue. Binding of amine anesthetics is weakly stereospecific and, surprisingly, shows no absolute requirement for the terminal alkyl ammonium moiety present in most local anesthetics...
局部麻醉药通过阻止膜对钠离子通透性的增加来阻断神经传导,而膜对钠离子通透性的增加通常会导致神经冲动。在含有叔胺基团的麻醉药中,阳离子质子化形式似乎比中性形式更具活性。然而,中性形式以及像苯佐卡因和脂肪醇这样的不带电荷的分子,也会降低钠通透性。对单根有髓神经和乌贼轴突的研究表明,钙离子与局部麻醉药之间没有直接相互作用,因此推翻了基于这两种物质之间竞争的理论。同样,将局部麻醉归因于膜 - 水界面电位变化的假说,也被不带电荷的麻醉药所显示出的效力所推翻。提出局部麻醉药通过扩张神经膜并引起蛋白质构象变化从而阻断钠通透性的假说,在概念上模糊不清且难以通过实验进行验证。来自单根神经纤维电压钳研究的证据表明,麻醉药分子从神经膜内侧直接与钠通道相互作用。麻醉药在膜去极化期间开放的钠通道内结合,阻止正常的钠离子通量。麻醉药分子可以从开放通道解离,但不能从神经处于静息状态时保持关闭的通道解离。在麻醉期间,调节钠通道开放和关闭的“门控”特性会被可逆地改变。具体而言,失活功能的反应更慢,并且需要更负的膜电位变化才能达到与未麻醉神经相同的值。在外部应用叔胺麻醉药后,会观察到第二种缓慢失活。麻醉药对开放钠通道的选择性结合为韦登斯基抑制提供了一个简单的解释,即阻滞作用随着神经冲动频率的增加而增强。当冲动以更高频率发生时,在与麻醉药结合反应所需时间相当的一段时间内,更多的钠通道开放,因此更多的通道被阻断。此外,失活功能的变化导致更长的不应期,从而在更高频率下冲动高度降低。带电荷的麻醉药分子可能结合在钠通道的孔中。它们的结合可以被膜中的电场调节。通道对较大的麻醉药分子具有更高的亲和力,但这可能是由于它们更大的疏水性以及它们的大小。结合位点有利于在胺基和芳香族残基之间含有更多极性键的分子。胺类麻醉药的结合具有较弱的立体特异性,令人惊讶的是,对于大多数局部麻醉药中存在的末端烷基铵部分并没有绝对要求……