Sympathetic activation triggers endogenous opioid release and analgesia within peripheral inflamed tissue |
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Authors: | Binder Waltraud Mousa Shaaban A Sitte Nicolle Kaiser Myriam Stein Christoph Schäfer Michael |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Klinikum Benjamin Franklin, Freie Universit?t, Hindenburgdamm 30, D-12200 Berlin, Germany. W.Binde@unsw.edu.au |
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Abstract: | Stress induces analgesia by mechanisms within and outside the brain. Here we show that the sympathetic nervous system is an essential trigger of intrinsic opioid analgesia within peripheral injured tissue. Noradrenaline, injected directly into inflamed hind paws of male Wistar rats, produced dose-dependent antinociception, reversible by alpha(1)-, alpha(2)- and beta(2)-antagonists. alpha(1)-, alpha(2)- and beta(2)-adrenergic receptors were demonstrated on beta-endorphin-containing immune cells and noradrenaline induced adrenergic receptor-specific release of beta-endorphin from immune cell suspensions. This antinociceptive effect of noradrenaline was reversed by micro - and delta-opioid antagonists as well as by anti-beta-endorphin. Stress-induced peripheral analgesia was abolished by chemical sympathectomy and by adrenergic antagonists. These findings indicate that sympathetic neuron-derived noradrenaline stimulates adrenergic receptors on inflammatory cells to release beta-endorphin, which induces analgesia via activation of peripheral opioid receptors. |
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Keywords: | inflammation noradrenaline pain Wistar rats |
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