首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


Differential Block of Fast and Slow Inactivating Tetrodotoxin-sensitive Sodium Channels by Droperidol in Spinal Dorsal Horn Neurons
Authors:Olschewski  Andrea Drmed; Bru  Michael E PD Drmed; Hempelmann  Gunter Prof Drmed Drhc&#x;; Vogel  Werner Prof Drrernat&#x;; Safronov  Boris V PhD
Institution:Olschewski, Andrea Dr.med.*; Bräu, Michael E. P.D. Dr.med.*; Hempelmann, Gunter Prof. Dr.med. Dr.h.c.†; Vogel, Werner Prof. Dr.rer.nat.‡; Safronov, Boris V. Ph.D.§
Abstract:Background: Dorsal horn neurons of the spinal cord participate in neuronal pain transmission. During spinal and epidural anesthesia, dorsal horn neurons are exposed to local anesthetics and opioids. Droperidol is usually given with opioids to avoid nausea and vomiting. A recently developed method of "entire soma isolation" has made it possible to study directly the action of droperidol on different components of Na+ current in dorsal horn neurons.

Methods: Using a combination of the whole-cell patch-clamp recording from spinal cord slices and the entire soma isolation method, we studied the direct action of droperidol on two types of Na+ currents in dorsal horn neurons of young rats.

Results: The tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current in isolated somata consisted of a fast inactivating (tau]F, 0.5-2 ms; 80-90% of the total amplitude) and a slow inactivating (tau]S, 6-20 ms; 10-20% of the total amplitude) component. Droperidol, at concentrations relevant for spinal and epidural anesthesia, selectively and reversibly suppressed the fast component with a half-maximum inhibiting concentration (IC50) of 8.3 mu]m. The slow inactivating component was much less sensitive to droperidol; the estimated IC50 value was 809 mu]m.

Keywords:
点击此处可从《The Journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists》浏览原始摘要信息
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号