Monday, May 3, 2021

Synergism between oral paracetamol and nefopam in a murine model of postoperative pain

Abstract

Background

The use of paracetamol or nefopam for postoperative pain control is limited by the need of high doses associated with unwanted effects. Previous works suggest positive interactions between both compounds that may be exploited to obtain potentiation of antinociception.

Methods

Mechanical and heat antinociception induced by oral doses of paracetamol, nefopam or their combination was studied by isobolographic analysis in a murine model of post‐surgical pain. The effective doses that produced 50% antinociception (ED50) were calculated from the log dose‐response curves for each compound. Subsequently, the effects of ED8.7s, ED12.5s, ED17.5s and ED35s of nefopam and paracetamol combined were assessed.

Results

Oral paracetamol induced dose‐dependent relief of postoperative sensitivity and showed higher efficacy reducing mechanical hypersensitivity (ED50 177.3±15.4 mg/kg) than heat hyperalgesia (ED50 278.6±43 mg/kg). Oral nefopam induced dose‐dependent antinociception with similar efficacy for mechanical and heat hypersensitivity (ED50s 5.42±0.81 vs 5.83±0.72). Combinations of increasing isoeffective doses revealed that combined ED17.5s (85.76 mg/kg paracetamol and 1.9 mg/kg nefopam) and ED35s (132.67 mg/kg and 3.73 mg/kg) showed synergistic effects leading to 75% and 90% mechanical antinociception, respectively. These mixtures were defined by interaction indexes of 0.43 and 0.41 and ratios 45:1 and 35:1 paracetamol:nefopam, respectively. The same combinations showed additive effects for the inhibition of incisional thermal hyperalgesia.

Conclusions and limitations

This work describes a synergistic antinociceptive interaction between low doses of nefopam and paracetamol for the treatment of postoperative hypersensitivity to peripheral stimuli. The promising results obtained on reflexive nociceptive responses of young male mice subjected to plantar surgery highlight the interest of further research evaluating the effects of this mixture on the affective‐motivational component of pain and in females and additional age groups. Confirmation of pain‐relieving efficacy and safety of this oral combination clinically available in European and Asian countries could provide a useful tool for post‐surgical pain management.



from Wiley: European Journal of Pain: Table of Contents https://ift.tt/3tdnoLV
via IFTTT

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