Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2547498 | Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Processed Aconiti tuber (PAT) is a herbal medicine that has been widely used as an analgesic since ancient times. We investigated effects of subanalgesic doses of PAT on morphine tolerance in mice. Mice received subcutaneous morphine (10Â mg/kg) and oral PAT at subanalgesic doses (0.1 or 0.3Â g/kg), once a day for 7 days. Mechanical nociceptive thresholds were measured using the tail pressure test, at 60Â min after the daily s.c. morphine injections. In the placebo-treated group, repeated administration of s.c. morphine resulted in development of analgesic tolerance. In the PAT-treated groups, oral PAT attenuated morphine tolerance, dose-dependently. The main ingredient alkaloid of PAT causing its tolerance-attenuating activity was mesaconitine, but other ingredient alkaloids, such as aconitine and hypaconitine, also contributed to this activity. In addition, repeated treatment with PAT could reverse already-developed morphine tolerance. Subanalgesic doses of oral PAT thus can attenuate and reverse morphine tolerance in mice.
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Authors
Haihua Shu, Hideko Arita, Masakazu Hayashida, Hiroshi Sekiyama, Kazuo Hanaoka,