buprenorphine has been researched along with Reperfusion-Injury* in 3 studies
3 other study(ies) available for buprenorphine and Reperfusion-Injury
Article | Year |
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Intrathecal morphine, but not buprenorphine or pentazocine, can induce spastic paraparesis after a noninjurious interval of spinal cord ischemia in the rat.
In this study, we sought to determine the effect of intrathecal (IT) pentazocine or buprenorphine on the neurological outcome after a short interval of spinal cord ischemia in rats. Although IT morphine (30 microg) induced spastic paraparesis after 6 min of aortic occlusion, neither pentazocine (150 microg) nor buprenorphine (4 microg) produced neurological dysfunction. Our results indicate that the effect of various opioids on the motor function after a noninjurious interval of spinal cord ischemia is opioid-specific. Topics: Analgesics, Opioid; Animals; Blood Pressure; Body Temperature; Buprenorphine; Injections, Spinal; Male; Morphine; Muscle Weakness; Paraparesis; Pentazocine; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reperfusion Injury; Spinal Cord Ischemia | 2004 |
Buprenorphine given after surgery does not alter renal ischemia/reperfusion injury.
Potential drugs for human acute renal failure are often tested in an animal model of renal ischemia/reperfusion injury. Analgesics are often not given after surgery because of concerns that they would alter renal function. Therefore, we tested whether postoperative analgesia would alter animal health or affect the degree of renal injury.. Mice were subjected to either 32 or 37 minutes of renal ischemia, given two or six doses of buprenorphine or vehicle at 12-hour intervals, and followed for 72 hours. In some animals, we measured body temperature and physical activity by use of telemetry.. Animals treated with buprenorphine recovered more rapidly from surgery based on postoperative activity, and had a small but not significant tendency for faster restoration of normal body temperature. Animals treated with buprenorphine had less weight loss after 37 minutes of ischemia. Buprenorphine given after surgery did not influence the degree of renal injury after ischemia/reperfusion.. Buprenorphine should be given after renal ischemia-reperfusion surgery because administration of the proper analgesic improved animal health without interfering with the renal ischemia/reperfusion model. Analgesic treatment at the time of the operation and 12 hours after was sufficient. Buprenorphine may reduce the post-surgical stress response, and thus potentially improve the specificity of testing for drugs that reduce or treat renal injury. Topics: Analgesics, Opioid; Animals; Body Temperature; Buprenorphine; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Humans; Kidney; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Motor Activity; Reperfusion Injury; Surgical Procedures, Operative | 2000 |
A method for long duration anaesthesia for a new hindlimb ischaemia-reperfusion model in mice.
To study the relationship between ischaemia-reperfusion and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS), a new anaesthesia method was required to be applied to C57BL/6 mice. These mice are also used in a well accepted, standardized model for MODS using intraperitoneally administered zymosan (zymosan induced general inflammation, ZIGI). The aim was to develop a new model for ischaemia-reperfusion with 6 h of anaesthesia. This and further specific requirements for the combination of ischaemia-reperfusion and the ZIGI method, made us select inhalational anaesthesia using isoflurane in oxygen. This study evaluates whether long-term anaesthesia confounds the results of ischaemia-reperfusion and the ZIGI model. In addition the benefits of using the analgesic buprenorphine were evaluated. Ischaemia was induced with a tourniquet around the hindlimb. Ischaemia and reperfusion were verified by imaging a radioactive tracer with a gamma-camera. It was established that anaesthesia with isoflurane in oxygen caused little perturbation of body temperature and respiratory rate. A survival rate of 89% without noteworthy influence on organs was obtained. Buprenorphine proved to provide adequate analgesia and had no influence on measured parameters. In our experimental setting, this model with long duration anaesthesia allowed us to induce ischaemia and reperfusion of the hindlimb without perturbation of measurements. It also allowed good exposure of the abdomen and facilitated combination with the ZIGI model. Topics: Analgesics, Opioid; Anesthesia; Anesthetics, Inhalation; Animals; Body Temperature; Buprenorphine; Disease Models, Animal; Isoflurane; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Organ Size; Radionuclide Imaging; Radiopharmaceuticals; Reperfusion Injury; Respiration; Technetium Tc 99m Pyrophosphate | 1997 |