μ1-阿片受体拮抗剂纳洛唑嗪可逆转吗啡诱导的呼吸抑制,引起呼吸兴奋和不稳定。

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY
Paulina M Getsy, Walter May, Fraser Henderson, Gregory A Coffee, Santhosh M Baby, Yee-Hsee Hsieh, Stephen J Lewis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

阿片受体拮抗剂的施用被认为可以克服阿片类药物的通气抑制作用。我们发现吗啡的许多通气抑制作用在(mu1) μ1-阿片受体阻断后转化为兴奋反应,并且这些反应伴随着通气不稳定。在这项研究中,我们报告了(1)吗啡(10mg /kg, IV)引起的通气反应和(2)随后低氧-高氧血症(H-H)刺激和返回室内空气引起的雄性Sprague Dawley大鼠的通气反应(i)药,(ii)中枢作用的选择性μ -阿片受体拮抗剂纳洛嗪(1.5 mg/kg, IV),或(iii)中枢作用的(delta1,2) δ1,2-阿片受体拮抗剂纳曲多(1.5 mg/kg, IV)。吗啡诱导的大鼠呼吸频率、吸气峰流量、呼气峰流量、EF50、吸气动力和呼气动力的降低,在纳洛嗪预处理大鼠中转化为显著升高。吗啡对纳洛唑嗪处理大鼠的呼气延迟和呼吸暂停的不良影响增强,吗啡增加纳洛唑嗪处理大鼠的呼吸不稳定(即非呼吸指数),这不是由于通气驱动的增加。随后暴露于H-H刺激在两组中引起了质量上相似的反应,而在返回室内空气时的反应(例如,呼吸频率,吸气和呼气时间,呼气末暂停,松弛时间,呼气延迟和非急促呼吸指数)在纳洛唑嗪处理的大鼠与给药的大鼠中有本质上的不同。纳曲多对吗啡的上述作用影响不大。这些新数据突出了μ1-阿片受体拮抗作用对吗啡通气作用的复杂影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reversal of morphine-induced respiratory depression with the µ1-opioid receptor antagonist naloxonazine engenders excitation and instability of breathing.

The administration of opioid receptor antagonists is believed to overcome ventilatory depressant effects of opioids. Here we show that many ventilatory depressant effects of morphine are converted to excitatory responses after µ1-opioid receptor blockade, and that these responses are accompanied by ventilatory instability. In this study, we report 1) ventilatory responses elicited by morphine (10 mg/kg, iv) and 2) ventilatory responses elicited by a subsequent hypoxic-hypercapnic (HH) gas challenge and return to room air in male Sprague Dawley rats pretreated with 1) vehicle, 2) the centrally acting selective µ1-opioid receptor antagonist, naloxonazine (1.5 mg/kg, iv), or 3) the centrally acting (delta 1,2) δ1,2-opioid receptor antagonist, naltrindole (1.5 mg/kg, iv). The morphine-induced decreases in frequency of breathing, peak inspiratory flow, peak expiratory flow, expiratory flow at 50% expired TV, inspiratory drive, and expiratory drive in vehicle-treated rats were converted to profound increases in naloxonazine-treated rats. Additionally, the adverse effects of morphine on expiratory delay and apneic pause were augmented in naloxonazine-treated rats, and administration of morphine increased ventilatory instability (i.e., noneupneic breathing index) in naloxonazine-treated rats, which was not due to increases in ventilatory drive. Subsequent exposure to a HH gas challenge elicited qualitatively similar responses in both groups, whereas the responses upon return to room air (e.g., frequency of breathing, inspiratory time, expiratory time, end expiratory pause, relaxation time, expiratory delay, and noneupneic breathing index) were substantially different in naloxonazine-treated versus vehicle-treated rats. The above mentioned effects of morphine were only marginally affected in naltrindole-treated rats. These novel data highlight the complicated effects that µ1-opioid receptor antagonism exerts on the ventilatory effects of morphine.NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study shows that the systemic injection of morphine elicits a pronounced overshoot in ventilation in freely-moving Sprague Dawley rats pretreated with the centrally-acting selective µ1-opioid receptor antagonist, naloxonazine, but not with the centrally-acting δ1,2-opioid receptor antagonist, naltrindole. This suggests that morphine can recruit a non-µ1-opioid receptor system that promotes breathing.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
4.10%
发文量
146
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology publishes original research covering the broad scope of molecular, cellular, and integrative aspects of normal and abnormal function of cells and components of the respiratory system. Areas of interest include conducting airways, pulmonary circulation, lung endothelial and epithelial cells, the pleura, neuroendocrine and immunologic cells in the lung, neural cells involved in control of breathing, and cells of the diaphragm and thoracic muscles. The processes to be covered in the Journal include gas-exchange, metabolic control at the cellular level, intracellular signaling, gene expression, genomics, macromolecules and their turnover, cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, cell motility, secretory mechanisms, membrane function, surfactant, matrix components, mucus and lining materials, lung defenses, macrophage function, transport of salt, water and protein, development and differentiation of the respiratory system, and response to the environment.
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