• Anesthesiology · Jan 1995

    Local anesthetics inhibit substance P binding and evoked increases in intracellular Ca2+.

    • Y M Li, D E Wingrove, H P Too, M Marnerakis, E R Stimson, G R Strichartz, and J E Maggio.
    • Department of Biological Chemistry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.
    • Anesthesiology. 1995 Jan 1; 82 (1): 166-73.

    BackgroundDuring spinal and epidural anesthesia, local anesthetics reach concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid and spinal cord tissues at which their actions may extend beyond the classic blockade of sodium channels. This study examines the effects of several clinical and experimental local anesthetics on the binding and actions of a peptide neurotransmitter, substance P, known to be important in nociceptive transmission in the dorsal horn.MethodsThe binding of radiolabeled (Bolton-Hunter modified) substance P was studied in chick brain membranes in the presence of local anesthetics. The increase in intracellular calcium [Ca2+]in evoked by substance P was measured by the fluorescent indicator fura-2 loaded in a murine cell line expressing substance P (NK1) receptors. Cells were preincubated with bupivacaine before and during the transient addition of substance P.ResultsBoth substance P binding and Ca2+ increase were inhibited half-maximally by approximately 1 mM bupivacaine at pH 7.5, whereas tetracaine, lidocaine, and benzocaine were slightly less potent at inhibiting binding. Concentration-dependent substance P-binding studies showed that bupivacaine's inhibition was not competitive. Inhibition of substance P binding by bupivacaine increased with increasing pH, but the protonated species appears to have some inhibitory activity, and quaternary lidocaine also inhibited binding. There was no stereoselectively to the binding inhibition.ConclusionsBecause millimolar concentrations of local anesthetics are within the range measured in spinal cord during intrathecal and epidural procedures, these results are consistent with a direct action of local anesthetics on tachykinin-mediated neurotransmission during regional anesthesia.

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