Current opinion in pharmacology
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Curr Opin Pharmacol · Feb 2008
ReviewSodium channels and nociception: recent concepts and therapeutic opportunities.
Recent scientific advances have enhanced our understanding of the role voltage-gated sodium channels play in pain sensation. Human data on Nav1.7 show that gain-of-function mutations lead to enhanced pain while loss-of-function mutations lead to Congenital Indifference to Pain. ⋯ In addition, recent reports show that CNS penetration by voltage-gated sodium channel blockers is not required for efficacy in pre-clinical pain models while others have reported that identification of subtype-selective small molecules is possible. All of these data are converging to suggest next generation sodium channel blockers may offer the potential for novel pain therapies in the future.
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Curr Opin Pharmacol · Feb 2008
ReviewInhalational anesthetics as preconditioning agents in ischemic brain.
While many pharmacological agents have been shown to protect the brain from cerebral ischemia in animal models, none have translated successfully to human patients. One potential clinical neuroprotective strategy in humans may involve increasing the brain's tolerance to ischemia by preischemic conditioning (preconditioning). ⋯ Mechanisms responsible for brain preconditioning are many, complex, and unclear and may involve Akt activation, ATP-sensitive potassium channels, and nitric oxide, amongst many others. Anesthetics, however, may play an important and unique role as preconditioning agents, particularly during the perioperative period.