bemesetron and norbinaltorphimine

bemesetron has been researched along with norbinaltorphimine* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for bemesetron and norbinaltorphimine

ArticleYear
Antinociceptive effect of shakuyakukanzoto, a Kampo medicine, in diabetic mice.
    Journal of pharmacological sciences, 2005, Volume: 99, Issue:4

    In this study, the antinociceptive effect of shakuyakukanzoto was investigated using streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice to certify its analgesic effect on diabetic patients. Shakuyakukanzoto (0.5 and 1.0 g/kg, p.o.) significantly increased the nociceptive threshold in diabetic mice. The antinociceptive activity of shakuyakukanzoto in diabetic mice was not antagonized by beta-funaltrexamine, naltrindole, or nor-binaltorphimine. The increased antinociceptive activity of (1.0 g/kg, p.o.) in diabetic mice was abolished by yohimbine (15 microg, i.t.), but not by NAN-190 (1 microg, i.t.), methysergide (15 microg, i.t.), or MDL-72222 (15 microg, i.t.). In shakuyakukanzoto diabetic mice treated with 6-hydroxydopamine (20 microg, i.t.) chemically lesioned noradrenergic pathways, shakuyakukanzoto (1.0 g/kg, p.o.) failed to exhibit an antinociceptive effect. Furthermore, the antinociceptive activity induced by norepinephrine (0.06 - 2 microg, i.t.) was markedly more potent in diabetic mice than in non-diabetic mice at the same dose. These results suggest that the antinociceptive effect of shakuyakukanzoto in diabetic mice is not mediated by the opioid systems and that this effect appears via selective activation of the spinal descending inhibitory alpha2-adrenergic systems without activating the serotonergic systems. The spinal alpha2-adrenoceptor-mediated analgesic mechanism was enhanced in diabetic mice, suggesting that shakuyakukanzoto exhibits its effect by activating the descending noradrenergic neurons.

    Topics: Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists; Analgesics; Animals; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Combinations; Drugs, Chinese Herbal; Glycyrrhiza; Male; Medicine, Kampo; Methysergide; Mice; Naltrexone; Narcotic Antagonists; Oxidopamine; Paeonia; Pain Measurement; Pain Threshold; Piperazines; Serotonin Antagonists; Sympatholytics; Tropanes; Yohimbine

2005