Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology, Teerthanker Mahaveer College of Pharmacy, Teerthanker Mahaveer University, Moradabad, Uttar
Pradesh 244001, India
2. Department of Chemistry, Constituent Government College (M.J.P.R.U.), Hasanpur, Uttar Pradesh
244241, India
Abstract
Abstract:
Neuropathy is a terrible disorder that has a wide range of etiologies. Drug-induced neuropathy,
which happens whenever a chemical agent damages the peripheral nerve system, has been linked here to the
iatrogenic creation of some drugs. It is potentially permanent and causes sensory impairments and paresthesia
that typically affects the hands, feet, and stockings; motor participation is uncommon. It might appear suddenly
or over time, and the long-term outlook varies. The wide range of chronic pain conditions experienced by
people has been one of the main obstacles to developing new, more effective medications for the treatment of
neuropathic pain. Animal models can be used to examine various neuropathic pain etiologies and symptoms.
Several models investigate the peripheral processes of neuropathic pain, whereas some even investigate the
central mechanisms, such as drug induce models like vincristine, cisplatin, bortezomib, or thalidomide, etc.,
and surgical models like sciatic nerve chronic constriction injury (CCI), sciatic nerve ligation through spinal
nerve ligation (SNL), sciatic nerve damage caused by a laser, SNI (spared nerve injury), etc. The more popular
animal models relying on peripheral nerve ligatures are explained. In contrast to chronic sciatic nerve contraction,
which results in behavioral symptoms of less reliable stressful neuropathies, (SNI) spared nerve injury
generates behavioral irregularities that are more feasible over a longer period. This review summarizes the
latest methods models as well as clinical ideas concerning this mechanism. Every strongest current information
on neuropathy is discussed, along with several popular laboratory models for causing neuropathy.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology