Long-lasting Hyperalgesia Induced by Fentanyl in Rats

Author:

Célèrier Evelyne1,Rivat Cyril1,Jun Yan2,Laulin Jean-Paul3,Larcher Agnès4,Reynier Patrick5,Simonnet Guy6

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Student, Université Victor Segalen–Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux, France.

2. Visiting Research Fellow, Department of Psychiatry, Chengdu Sichnan Hospital, China.

3. Assistant Professor, Université de Bordeaux I, Bordeaux, France.

4. Postdoctoral Fellow, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U 259, Université Victor Segalen–Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux, France.

5. Assistant Professor of Anesthesia, Département d’Anesthésie–Réanimation II, Hôpital du Haut-Lévêque, Bordeaux, France.

6. Professor in Medicine and Research Scientist, INSERM U 259, Université Victor Segalen–Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux, France.

Abstract

Background It has been reported that mu-opioid receptor activation leads to a sustained increase in glutamate synaptic effectiveness at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor level, a system associated with central hypersensitivity to pain. One hypothesis is that postoperative pain may result partly from the activation of NMDA pain facilitatory processes induced by opiate treatment per se. The authors tested here the effectiveness of the opiate analgesic fentanyl for eliciting a delayed enhancement in pain sensitivity. Methods The consequences of four bolus injections (every 15 min) of fentanyl (20-100 microg/kg per injection, subcutaneously) on immediate (for several hours) and long-term (for several days) sensitivity to nociceptive stimuli in the rat (paw-pressure vocalization test) were evaluated. The effects of the combination of the NMDA-receptor antagonist ketamine (10 mg/kg, subcutaneously) with fentanyl also were assessed. Results Fentanyl administration exhibited a biphasic time-dependent effect: first, an early response (for 2-5 h) associated with a marked increase in nociceptive threshold (analgesia), and second, a later response associated with sustained lowering of the nociceptive threshold (5 days for the longest effect) below the basal value (30% of decrease for the maximal effect) indicative of hyperalgesia. The higher the fentanyl dose used, the more pronounced was the fentanyl-induced hyperalgesia. Ketamine pretreatment, which had no analgesic effect on its own, enhanced the earlier response (analgesia) and prevented the development of long-lasting hyperalgesia. Conclusions Fentanyl activates NMDA pain facilitatory processes, which oppose analgesia and lead to long-lasting enhancement in pain sensitivity.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference45 articles.

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