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Journal ArticleDOI

Pharmacology of spinal adrenergic systems which modulate spinal nociceptive processing.

Tony L. Yaksh
- 01 May 1985 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 5, pp 845-858
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TLDR
Examination of the spinal receptor systems with intrathecally administered agents indicates that spinal alpha, but not beta adrenergic receptor agonists produce a powerful analgesia as measured on a variety of reflex and operant measures in mouse, rat, cat, primate and man.
Abstract
Spinopetal pathways may be activated by a variety of brainstem manipulations including microinjections of morphine which are known to modulate spinal nociceptive processing. Based on the ability of these manipulations to release spinal noradrenalin; the ability to reverse the antinociceptive effects by intrathecal adrenergic antagonists and the fact that intrathecal injections of noradrenalin mimic the antinociceptive effect, it appears that the descending modulation may be mediated by descending noradrenergic systems. Examination of the spinal receptor systems with intrathecally administered agents indicates that spinal alpha, but not beta adrenergic receptor agonists produce a powerful analgesia as measured on a variety of reflex and operant measures in mouse, rat, cat, primate and man. On the basis of agonist and antagonist structure-activity relationships it appears that a significant effect can be produced in the absence of any detectable effect on motor function by the occupation of spinal receptors. Distinguishable alpha 1 receptors also appear “analgetically-coupled,” but their effects are uniformly contaminated by signs of cutaneous hyperreflexia at doses required to produce analgesia. The ordering of potency with which intrathecal adrenergic antagonists reverse the effects of intrathecal noradrenalin is indistinguishable from that of the reversal by these intrathecal agents of the antinociceptive effects evoked by brainstem morphine. This suggests that the population of spinal receptors acted upon by exogenously administered adrenergic agonists and endogenously released noradrenalin have indistinguishable characteristics.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Descending control of pain.

TL;DR: The present review focuses on the organisation of descending pathways and their pathophysiological significance, the role of individual transmitters and specific receptor types in the modulation and expression of mechanisms of descending inhibition and facilitation and the advantages and limitations of established and innovative analgesic strategies which act by manipulation of descending controls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral and autonomic correlates of the tactile evoked allodynia produced by spinal glycine inhibition: effects of modulatory receptor systems and excitatory amino acid antagonists.

Tony L. Yaksh
- 01 Apr 1989 - 
TL;DR: The lack of effect of agents having a powerful effect on somatic pain stimuli and the converse effects of glutamate receptor antagonists on the strychnine hyperesthesia at doses which do not affect the somaticPain response indicate discriminable processing systems, which resemble the clinical phenomenon observed in patients suffering from sensory dysesthesia following central and peripheral horn injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical stress: the role of pain and analgesia

TL;DR: The effects on the surgical stress response of the available techniques are summarized to bring recent findings into balance with previous data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidural clonidine analgesia for intractable cancer pain

TL;DR: It is suggested that epidural clonidine may provide effective relief for intractable cancer pain, particular of the neuropathic type, in patients with neuropathic pain treated withClonidine rather than placebo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noradrenergic pain modulation.

TL;DR: Following injury or inflammation, the central as well as peripheral noradrenergic system is subject to various plastic changes that influence its antinociceptive efficacy, such as induced by a change in the behavioral state.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic response of chest wall and lung injuries in rabbits exposed to air shock waves of short duration.

TL;DR: The chest walls of rabbits exposed to steep-fronted air shock waves of short duration produced by 50 g spherical charges of TNT were recorded by means of a mechano-electric motion transducer to study the correlation between the deformations of the chest and the damage inflicted to the underlying organs, especially the lungs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for the existence of monoamine neurons in the central nervous system. 3. the monoamine nerve terminal.

TL;DR: All the data strongly support the view that the specific central neurons giving rise to the terminals are monoaminergic, i.e. function by releasing their amines from the synaptic terminals, Consequently, DA, NA and 5-HT seem to be central neurotransmitters.
Journal Article

Evidence for the existence of monoamine neurons in the central nervous system. ii. experimentally induced changes in the intraneuronal amine levels of bulbospinal neuron systems.

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the fine, varicose nerve fibres observed in a vast number of regions in the mammalian central nervous system (mouse, hamster, rat, guineapig, rabbit, cat), which exhibit a green or yellow fluorescence, contain primary catecholamines and 5-HT respectively.
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