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. 1997;60(19):1651-8.
doi: 10.1016/s0024-3205(97)00107-0.

Antinociceptive effect of nifedipine and verapamil tested on rats chronically exposed to nicotine and after its withdrawal

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Antinociceptive effect of nifedipine and verapamil tested on rats chronically exposed to nicotine and after its withdrawal

V K Zbuzek et al. Life Sci. 1997.

Abstract

Antinociceptive effect of nifedipine (15 mg/kg i.p.) and verapamil (10 mg/kg s.c.) was examined in rats chronically exposed to nicotine (6 mg/kg/day via Alzet osmotic pump for 28 days) and after nicotine withdrawal. Sham operated rats served as control for testing DMSO (dimethylsulfoxide, a solvent for nifedipine), nifedipine and verapamil alone. Nociception was measured by the tail-flick technique. Nifedipine, but not verapamil, injected to control rats produced a ceiling tail-flick latency (20 sec) 30 min after the injection, lasting for 10 min. In rats exposed to chronic nicotine for 3 days, nifedipine treatment exhibited ceiling tail-flick latency within 10 min lasting for 80 min. Tested in rats exposed to nicotine for 3 weeks, nifedipine treatment produced this effect 25 min after the injection lasting for 60 min. Nicotine withdrawal abolished this effect. Verapamil did not exhibit any significant changes in tail-flick latencies. These data support our hypothesis that smoking patients treated with nifedipine could be at a potential risk in developing a high pain threshold and missing the first sign of heart attack--a chest pain.

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