How to Prevent Morphine ‘Tolerance’
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Tolerance to the pain-relieving effects of morphine – which builds rapidly with prolonged use – can be prevented by blocking a key substance that’s formed when the drug is taken, researchers at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine have discovered.
Their findings could lead to new therapies that allow morphine to be administered without patients becoming tolerant of it – a significant obstacle to effective pain relief – nor experiencing a host of severe side effects that accompany escalating doses of the painkiller.
The study is published in the November issue of The Journal of Clinical Investigation.
“We believe these findings represent a major breakthrough in understanding how tolerance to the pain-relieving action of morphine and other opiate medications develops – and how it can be prevented from happening in the first place,” said Daniela Salvemini, Ph.D., professor of internal medicine – division of pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine, and the study’s lead author.
Morphine and other opiate narcotics are the most powerful treatments for acute and chronic severe pain, but their effectiveness lessens quickly and significantly with repeated doses.
As tolerance develops, increased doses are necessary for equivalent relief. Escalating doses bring a variety of severe complications, including oversedation, reduced physical activity, respiratory problems, constipation and the strong potential for addiction.
Accordingly, there is major interest now in finding ways to administer morphine and other narcotics in repeated doses without bringing on tolerance or serious side effects.
Using an animal model, Salvemini and her colleagues found that that a substance called peroxynitrite plays a critical role in the development of morphine tolerance. Repeated doses of morphine cause peroxynitrite to develop in the spinal cord, which in turn causes inflammation and damage to proteins and DNA in that area.
The researchers found they could prevent morphine tolerance from occurring by therapeutically manipulating peroxynitrite – in other words, prevent it from working. They did that by either causing the substance to decompose once it had developed or by blocking it from forming in the first place.
“We believe our findings can be used by researchers to develop therapies that will allow patients to take morphine without becoming tolerant of its benefits,” said Salvemini. “For instance, when morphine is administered, another drug could be given simultaneously that prevents peroxynitrite from working and thus causing tolerance to develop.
“The benefit of this research is potentially quite large in terms of maintaining the pain-relieving effect of opiates such as morphine during prolong use while also reducing their side effects.”
The study was supported by grants from COFIN 2005 (Italy), IRCS Centro Neurolesi (Italy), Saint Louis University and the University of Florence (Italy).
Established in 1836, Saint Louis University School of Medicine has the distinction of awarding the first medical degree west of the Mississippi River. The school educates physicians and biomedical scientists, conducts medical research, and provides health care on a local, national and international level. Research at the school seeks new cures and treatments in five key areas: cancer, liver disease, heart/lung disease, aging and brain disease, and infectious disease.
Source: Saint Louis University Medical Center
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