II - Prostaglandin hyperalgesia: the peripheral analgesic activity of morphine, enkephalins and opioid antagonists
- PMID: 230543
- DOI: 10.1016/0090-6980(79)90104-7
II - Prostaglandin hyperalgesia: the peripheral analgesic activity of morphine, enkephalins and opioid antagonists
Abstract
Morphine, enkephalins, nalorphine, naloxone and pentazocine are shown to have a peripheral analgesic effect. In our modification of the Randall-Selitto test these substances were 50--100 times more potent than a standard local anaesthetic, lidocaine. At this peripheral site, naloxone did not antagonize the effect of morphine. Morphine had a marked analgesic effect on the hyperalgesia induced by PGE2 and PGI2, BaCl2, Ca2+ ionophore A23187, isoprenaline but not on that induced by dibutyryl cyclic AMP. It was suggested that the peripheral analgesic effect of morphine is due to an inhibition of adenylate-cyclase activity.
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