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Vol. 285, Issue 1, 63-70, April 1998
Equipe NPPUA, Laboratoire de Pharmacologie, Faculté de
Pharmacie, F-63001 Clermont-Ferrand Cedex, France
Because it generally is admitted that neuropathic pain is resistant to
opioid analgesia, we investigated the effect of morphine on
hyperalgesia in streptozocin-induced diabetes in rats. The antinociceptive effect of morphine (0.5-4 mg/kg i.v.) on mechanical (paw pressure test), thermal (tail immersion test) and chemical (formalin test) hyperalgesia was reduced. To clarify the mechanisms involved in the alteration of morphine analgesia, the binding characteristics of mu and delta receptor
agonists and the pharmacokinetics of morphine and its glucuronide
metabolites morphine 3-glucuronide and morphine 6-glucuronide
were determined. KD and
Bmax values for
[3H][D-Ala2,(Me)Phe4, Gly(ol)5]enkephalin
and
[3H][D-Pen2,D-Pen5]enkephalin
to cerebral mu and delta opiate receptors
were not altered by diabetes. Likewise, the plasma maximal
concentration of morphine and metabolites, as well as the area under
the curve, did not differ between diabetic and normal rats. Only the
total clearance and the apparent volume of distribution of morphine were increased in diabetic rats, which suggests that the
diabetes-induced glycosylation of proteins might increase the
distribution of morphine in the aqueous compartment. These data
indicate that the reduced analgesic effect of morphine caused by
diabetes cannot be explained by a decrease in opiate-receptor affinity
or density but rather by kinetic alteration of morphine (increase of
total clearance and of volume of distribution in comparison with
healthy animals).
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