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Withania somnifera root extract prolongs analgesia and suppresses hyperalgesia in mice treated with morphine.

Authors :
Orrù, Alessandro
Marchese, Giorgio
Casu, Gianluca
Casu, Maria Antonietta
Kasture, Sanjay
Cottiglia, Filippo
Acquas, Elio
Mascia, Maria Paola
Anzani, Nicola
Ruiu, Stefania
Source :
Phytomedicine; Apr2014, Vol. 21 Issue 5, p745-752, 8p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Abstract: Previous studies demonstrated that Withania somnifera Dunal (WS), a safe medicinal plant, prevents the development of tolerance to the analgesic effect of morphine. In the present study, we investigated whether WS extract (WSE) (100mg/kg, i.p.) may also modulate the analgesic effect induced by acute morphine administration (2.5, 5, 10mg/kg, s.c.) in the tail-flick and in the hot plate tests, and if it may prevent the development of 2.5mg/kg morphine-induced rebound hyperalgesia in the low intensity tail-flick test. Further, to characterize the receptor(s) involved in these effects, we studied, by receptor-binding assay, the affinity of WSE for opioid (μ, δ, k), cannabinoid (CB<subscript>1</subscript>, CB<subscript>2</subscript>), glutamatergic (NMDA), GABAergic (GABA<subscript>A</subscript>, GABA<subscript>B</subscript>), serotoninergic (5HT<subscript>2A</subscript>) and adrenergic (α<subscript>2</subscript>) receptors. The results demonstrated that (i) WSE alone failed to alter basal nociceptive threshold in both tests, (ii) WSE pre-treatment significantly protracted the antinociceptive effect induced by 5 and 10mg/kg of morphine only in tail-flick test, (iii) WSE pre-treatment prevented morphine-induced hyperalgesia in the low intensity tail-flick test, and (iv) WSE exhibited a high affinity for the GABA<subscript>A</subscript> and moderate affinity for GABA<subscript>B</subscript>, NMDA and δ opioid receptors. WSE prolongs morphine-induced analgesia and suppresses the development of morphine-induced rebound hyperalgesia probably through involvement of GABA<subscript>A</subscript>, GABA<subscript>B</subscript>, NMDA and δ opioid receptors. This study suggests the therapeutic potential of WSE as a valuable adjuvant agent in opioid-sparing therapies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09447113
Volume :
21
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Phytomedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
95383215
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phymed.2013.10.021