Antinociceptive Efficacy of Verticinone in Murine Models of Inflammatory Pain and Paclitaxel Induced Neuropathic Pain
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Verticinone, an isosteroidal alkaloid separated from Bulbus Fritillaria (Chinese name "Bei-mu"), was evaluated for its analgesic activities in murine models of inflammatory and neuropathic pain. It was shown that oral administarion of verticinone could significantly inhibit acetic acid-induced writhing response in a dose-dependent way, and the writhing inhibition of 3 mg/kg verticinone was 66.2%, which was approximately higher than that of 200 mg/kg aspirin. In the formalin test, a high dose of (3 mg/kg) verticinone could inhibit the nociceptive response of both phases, but the lower dose (1.5 mg/kg) could only inhibit the second phase response, which suggested that verticinone might exert its analgesic effect through both central and peripheral mechanisms. In addition, in formalin and acetic acid tests, the spontaneous locomotive activities of the mice treated with verticinone were transiently greatly decreased when compared with the vehicle group. In the rat model of paclitaxel induced neuropathic pain, in contrast to the declined analgesic effect of morphine after repeated administration with the same dose, a relatively constant analgesic effect of verticinone was observed. These investigations suggested that verticinone could exert a good antinociceptive effect on inflammatory pain and cancer-related neuropathic pain probably through both peripheral and central mechanisms, and it might be partly involved with some sedation effects. Verticinone is expected to become a potentially novel sedative-analgesic agent without producing tolerance and dependence, but further studies are still urgently needed to elucidate the precise mechanisms and activities of it.
- 公益社団法人 日本薬学会の論文
著者
-
Wang Lijun
Department of Pharmacy, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital
-
Xu Fangzhou
Department of Pharmacy, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital
-
Xu Shongzhou
Department of Pediatrics, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital
-
Chen Chuntao
Center of Information, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital
-
Zhou Xueqing
Department of Pharmacy, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital
-
Lu Yuzhen
Department of Pharmacy, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital
-
Zhang Huihui
Department of Pharmacy, Jinan University