COMPARATIVE STUDY
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Anti-allodynic interactions between NMDA receptor channel blockers and morphine or clonidine in neuropathic rats.

Previous studies suggested that combining N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists with either mu-opioid agonist morphine or alpha2-adrenoreceptor agonist clonidine results in the significant synergistic enhancement of analgesic activity in the animal models of acute and neuropathic pain. When given alone, NMDA receptor antagonists, morphine and clonidine are capable of attenuating tactile allodynia associated with chronic nerve injury. The present study aimed to assess anti-allodynic effects of these compounds and to test additivity of these interactions using isobolographic analysis. Adult male Wistar rats with unilateral loose ligation of sciatic nerve developed significant tactile allodynia (between-paw difference of about 18-20 g). In separate groups of animals, dose-dependent anti-allodynic activity was confirmed for memantine (1.8-17.8 mg/kg), neramexane (1.8-17.8 mg/kg), morphine (1-10 mg/kg) and clonidine (0.01-0.1 mg/kg). In a subsequent series of experiments, memantine (or neramexane) and morphine (or clonidine) were co-administered at the fixed equi-effective dose ratios (six dose levels per drug combination). None of the tested combinations produced supra-additive, synergistic effects. In fact, memantine+clonidine, neramexane+clonidine and morphine+neramexane were producing simple additive effects, while morphine+memantine was characterized as the infra-additive combination. Thus, despite expectations based on previous studies, NMDA receptor channel blockers, memantine and neramexane, produce no synergistic interactions with either morphine or clonidine when administered acutely to rats with nerve injury-induced tactile allodynia.

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