Effects of Intra-articular Injection of Agmatine and Clonidine into the Knee Joint Cavity on the Induction and Maintenance of Arthritic Pain in Rats. |
Myeong Jong Lee, Hyen Soo Shim, Geun Hee Seol, Pill Joo Kim, Seung Ho Han, Jaeyong Yee, Chan Kim, Kyu Chang Lee, Hye Young Kim, Sun Seek Min |
1Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Konkuk University College of Medicine, Chungju, Korea. 2Department of Physiology and Biophysics, College of Medicine, Eulji University, Daejeon, Korea. ssmin@eulji.ac.kr 3Department of Basic Nursing Science, Korea University College of Nursing, Seoul, Korea. 4Professional Oriental Medicine Graduate School, Wonkwang University, Iksan, Korea. |
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND Previous studies suggest that systemic administration of agmatine, endogenous ligand for imidazoline receptors has anti-hypernociceptive effects in experimental animal. However the peripheral effects of agmatine on inflammatory pain have not yet been elucidated.
Here we examined the effects of intra-articular injection of agmatine in the induction and maintenance phase of arthritic pain. In addition, we sought to determine the potential contribution of imidazoline and alpha(2)-adrenergic receptors to the antinociceptive effects using clonidine which is mixed alpha(2)-adrenoceptor and imidazoline receptor agonist. METHODS To induce arthritis in rats, 2% lambda-carrageenan (50microliter, in saline) was injected into the joint of the right hind limb under enflurane anesthesia. Either agmatine (10, 50, 100microgram/40microliter) or clonidine (10, 50, 100microgram/40microliter) was injected into the knee joint cavity immediately before or 4 hr after carrageenan injection. Weight load tests were performed to measure pain-related behavior in freely walking rats. RESULTS The intraarticular injection of agmatine into the knee joint had no effects in the both phase of induction and maintenance of arthritic pain at any dose tested. However, injection of clonidine reversed arthritic pain, when injected 4 h after carrageenan injection. CONCLUSIONS In rats, agmatine has no peripheral effect on inflammatory pain and imidazoline receptors in the periphery may not contribute to the anti-inflammatory pain. |
Key Words:
agmatine; arthritic pain; clonidine; imidazoline receptor; inflammation |
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