Postoperative demand for analgesics in relation to individual levels of endorphins and substance P in cerebrospinal fluid
- PMID: 6181455
- DOI: 10.1016/0304-3959(82)90027-6
Postoperative demand for analgesics in relation to individual levels of endorphins and substance P in cerebrospinal fluid
Abstract
Fourteen adult patients were allowed to self-administer small intravenous doses of pethidine to relieve postoperative pain. Thirteen of the patients obtained subjectively satisfactory analgesia while establishing steady-state levels of pethidine in plasma. The individual demand for pethidine was related to individual levels of fraction I endorphins and substance P-like immunoreactivity in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). There was a significant and inverse relationship between preoperative fraction I concentrations in CSF and the individual mean pethidine concentrations in plasma (P less than 0.05) and CSF (P less than 0.02) during self-administration. In the 24 h period encompassing surgery and postoperative self-administered analgesia, substance P decreased in 7 patients with calculated CSF pethidine great than 200 ng/ml, but remained virtually unchanged in 7 patients with calculated CSF pethidine less than 200 ng/ml. The results suggest a role for endorphins in the modulation of acute pain and are compatible with experimental evidence for an inhibitory effect of opiates on substance P release.
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