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Antihyperalgesic efficacy of 5% lidocaine medicated plaster in capsaicin and sunburn pain models--two randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover trials in healthy volunteers

Authors :
Johannes Thaler
David Hauer
Burkhard Gustorff
Astrid Seis
Julia Draxler
Source :
Expert opinion on pharmacotherapy. 12(18)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The aim of this research is to analyze analgesic efficacy of the 5% lidocaine medicated plaster in two randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover studies in 16 healthy volunteers using capsaicin and sunburn pain models.Lidocaine and placebo plasters were simultaneously applied to forearms and thighs at contralateral body sites for three alternating 12-h plaster-on/plaster-off periods. Between the second and third plaster-on period, 4.2-cm circular spots on both pretreated thighs were irradiated with three times the individual minimal erythema dose of UVB light. After the last plaster-on period, 20 μl of 0.1% capsaicin was injected intradermally into both forearms. The study was repeated using a single 12-h plaster application.The area of pinprick hyperalgesia was diminished by 53% (p0.003) in the capsaicin model and by 84% (p0.0001) in the sunburn model; the intensity of mechanical hyperalgesia to rigid filaments (8 - 512 mN) was reduced in both models. Cold pain perception threshold was reduced (19.7°C ± 8.0 vs 21.8°C ± 6.8 for placebo, p0.05, sunburn). Similar effects were observed in the 12-h exposure study. No effect was seen on capsaicin-induced spontaneous pain and flare size, or blood flow in the sunburn area, and heat hyperalgesia in either study.Lidocaine plaster effectively treats mechanical hyperalgesia and cold pain.

Details

ISSN :
17447666
Volume :
12
Issue :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Expert opinion on pharmacotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....22a5013cec6ca0e6bbc6c7ac2956b7d8