Affiliation:
1. Albany Medical College, Albany, NY
Abstract
Opioids are broad-spectrum analgesics with potent pain-relieving qualities but also
with potential adverse effects related to both short-term and long-term therapy. Researchers have attempted to alter existing opioid analgesics, utilize different routes/
formulations, or combine opioid analgesics with other compounds in efforts to improve analgesia while minimizing adverse effects. Exogenous opioids, administered
in efforts to achieve analgesia, work by mimicking the actions of endogenous opioids. Endogenous opioids and their receptors are located in the brain (supraspinal areas), spinal cord, and periphery. Although opioids and opioid receptors in the
brain and spinal cord have received much attention over many years, peripheral endogenous opioid analgesic systems have only been extensively studied during the
past decade. It has been known since 1990 that following injection into the rodent
hindpaw, d-Ala2
, N-Me-Phe4
, Gly5
-ol-enkephalin (DAMGO) [a muopioid receptor agonist] probably exerts its antinociceptive effects locally, since the doses administered
are too low to have an effect in the central nervous system (CNS). This notion has
been supported by the observation that the quaternary compound morphine methyliodide, which does not as readily cross the bloodbrain barrier and enter the CNS,
produced antinociception following intradermal administration into the hindpaw,
but not when the same dose was administered systemically (subcutaneously at a
distant site). With a growing appreciation of peripheral endogenous opioids, peripheral endogenous opioid receptors, and peripheral endogenous opioid analgesic
systems, investigators began growing hopeful that it may be possible to achieve adequate analgesics while avoiding unwanted central untoward adverse effects (e.g.
respiratory depression, somnolence, addiction). Peripherally-acting opioids, which
capitalize on peripheral endogenous opioid analgesic systems, may be one potential future strategy which may be utilized in efforts to achieve potent analgesia with
minimal side effects.
Key words: Pain, opioids, immune cells, peripherally-acting opioids (PAO), leukocytes, inflammatory pain, peripheral analgesia
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
22 articles.
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