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Anesthesiology:
February 2000 - Volume 92 - Issue 2 - p 473
Laboratory Investigations

Norepinephrine Facilitates Inhibitory Transmission in Substantia Gelatinosa of Adult Rat Spinal Cord (Part 1): Effects on Axon Terminals of GABAergic and Glycinergic Neurons

Baba, Hiroshi M.D., Ph.D*; Shimoji, Koki M.D., Ph.D†; Yoshimura, Megumu M.D., Ph.D‡

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Abstract

Background: The activation of descending norepinephrine-containing fibers from the brain stem inhibits nociceptive transmission at the spinal level. How these descending noradrenergic pathways exert the analgesic effect is not understood fully. Membrane hyperpolarization of substantia gelatinosa (Rexed lamina II) neurons by the activation of α2 receptors may account for depression of pain transmission. In addition, it is possible that norepinephrine affects transmitter release in the substantia gelatinosa.
Methods: Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (9–10 weeks of age, 250–300 g) were used in this study. Transverse spinal cord slices were cut from the isolated lumbar cord. The blind whole-cell patch-clamp technique was used to record from neurons. The effects of norepinephrine on the frequency and amplitude of miniature excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents were evaluated.
Results: In the majority of substantia gelatinosa neurons tested, norepinephrine (10–100 μM) dose-dependently increased the frequency of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)–ergic and glycinergic miniature inhibitory postsynaptic currents; miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents were unaffected. This augmentation was mimicked by an α1-receptor agonist, phenylephrine (10–60 μM), and inhibited by α1-receptor antagonists prazosin (0.5 μM) and 2-(2,6-dimethoxyphenoxyethyl) aminomethyl-1,4-benzodioxane (0.5 μM). Neither postsynaptic responsiveness to exogenously applied GABA and glycine nor the kinetics of GABAergic and glycinergic inhibitory postsynaptic currents were affected by norepinephrine.
Conclusion: These results suggest that norepinephrine enhances inhibitory synaptic transmission in the substantia gelatinosa through activation of presynaptic α1 receptors, thus providing a mechanism underlying the clinical use of α1 agonists with local anesthetics in spinal anesthesia.

© 2000 American Society of Anesthesiologists, Inc.

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