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Eslicarbazepine acetate interacts in a beneficial manner with standard and alternative analgesics to reduce trigeminal nociception

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2020
Authors
Pecikoza, Uroš
Tomić, Maja
Micov, Ana
Vuković, Milja
Stepanović-Petrović, Radica
Article (Published version)
Metadata
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Abstract
Rationale: Acute pain states in the trigeminal region (headaches, dental pain) fall into the most prevalent painful conditions. Standard analgesics (paracetamol/NSAIDs) represent the cornerstone of their treatment, whereas triptans are primarily used in migraine attacks. Due to limited efficacy and/or side effects of current treatments, identifying favorable combinations of available drugs is justified. Objectives: Eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) is a novel antiepileptic drug whose effectiveness against trigeminal pain was recently demonstrated. Here, we examined the interactions between ESL and several standard/alternative analgesics (paracetamol, propyphenazone, naproxen, zolmitriptan, and metoclopramide) in a model of trigeminal pain. Methods: The antinociceptive effects of orally administered ESL, standard/alternative analgesics, and two-drug ESL-analgesic combinations were examined in the orofacial formalin test in mice. The type of interaction between drugs was determined by isobol...ographic analysis. Results: ESL, analgesics, and two-drug ESL-analgesic combinations significantly and dose-dependently reduced nociceptive behaviour in the second, inflammatory phase of the test. Isobolographic analysis revealed that ESL interacted additively with paracetamol/propyphenazone/zolmitriptan and synergistically with naproxen/metoclopramide (with about a 4-fold and 3-fold reduction of doses in the ESL-naproxen and ESL-metoclopramide combination, respectively). Conclusions: ESL interacted in a beneficial manner with several analgesics that are used for trigeminal pain treatment, producing synergistic interactions with naproxen/metoclopramide and additive interactions with paracetamol/propyphenazone/zolmitriptan. Our results suggest that combining ESL with analgesics could theoretically enable the use of lower doses of individual drugs for achieving pain relief.

Keywords:
Eslicarbazepine acetate / Isobolographic analysis / Metoclopramide / Non-opioid analgesics / Orofacial nociception / Triptans
Source:
Psychopharmacology, 2020, 237, 5, 1435-1446
Publisher:
  • Springer Nature
Funding / projects:
  • Examination of mechanisms of action, toxicity and interactions of adjuvant analgesics (RS-175045)
Note:
  • Peer-reviewd manuscript: http://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3546

DOI: 10.1007/s00213-020-05470-7

ISSN: 0033-3158

WoS: 000515840900001

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85079176511
[ Google Scholar ]
1
URI
https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3547
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Pharmacy
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pecikoza, Uroš
AU  - Tomić, Maja
AU  - Micov, Ana
AU  - Vuković, Milja
AU  - Stepanović-Petrović, Radica
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3547
AB  - Rationale: Acute pain states in the trigeminal region (headaches, dental pain) fall into the most prevalent painful conditions. Standard analgesics (paracetamol/NSAIDs) represent the cornerstone of their treatment, whereas triptans are primarily used in migraine attacks. Due to limited efficacy and/or side effects of current treatments, identifying favorable combinations of available drugs is justified. Objectives: Eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) is a novel antiepileptic drug whose effectiveness against trigeminal pain was recently demonstrated. Here, we examined the interactions between ESL and several standard/alternative analgesics (paracetamol, propyphenazone, naproxen, zolmitriptan, and metoclopramide) in a model of trigeminal pain. Methods: The antinociceptive effects of orally administered ESL, standard/alternative analgesics, and two-drug ESL-analgesic combinations were examined in the orofacial formalin test in mice. The type of interaction between drugs was determined by isobolographic analysis. Results: ESL, analgesics, and two-drug ESL-analgesic combinations significantly and dose-dependently reduced nociceptive behaviour in the second, inflammatory phase of the test. Isobolographic analysis revealed that ESL interacted additively with paracetamol/propyphenazone/zolmitriptan and synergistically with naproxen/metoclopramide (with about a 4-fold and 3-fold reduction of doses in the ESL-naproxen and ESL-metoclopramide combination, respectively). Conclusions: ESL interacted in a beneficial manner with several analgesics that are used for trigeminal pain treatment, producing synergistic interactions with naproxen/metoclopramide and additive interactions with paracetamol/propyphenazone/zolmitriptan. Our results suggest that combining ESL with analgesics could theoretically enable the use of lower doses of individual drugs for achieving pain relief.
PB  - Springer Nature
T2  - Psychopharmacology
T1  - Eslicarbazepine acetate interacts in a beneficial manner with standard and alternative analgesics to reduce trigeminal nociception
VL  - 237
IS  - 5
SP  - 1435
EP  - 1446
DO  - 10.1007/s00213-020-05470-7
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pecikoza, Uroš and Tomić, Maja and Micov, Ana and Vuković, Milja and Stepanović-Petrović, Radica",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Rationale: Acute pain states in the trigeminal region (headaches, dental pain) fall into the most prevalent painful conditions. Standard analgesics (paracetamol/NSAIDs) represent the cornerstone of their treatment, whereas triptans are primarily used in migraine attacks. Due to limited efficacy and/or side effects of current treatments, identifying favorable combinations of available drugs is justified. Objectives: Eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) is a novel antiepileptic drug whose effectiveness against trigeminal pain was recently demonstrated. Here, we examined the interactions between ESL and several standard/alternative analgesics (paracetamol, propyphenazone, naproxen, zolmitriptan, and metoclopramide) in a model of trigeminal pain. Methods: The antinociceptive effects of orally administered ESL, standard/alternative analgesics, and two-drug ESL-analgesic combinations were examined in the orofacial formalin test in mice. The type of interaction between drugs was determined by isobolographic analysis. Results: ESL, analgesics, and two-drug ESL-analgesic combinations significantly and dose-dependently reduced nociceptive behaviour in the second, inflammatory phase of the test. Isobolographic analysis revealed that ESL interacted additively with paracetamol/propyphenazone/zolmitriptan and synergistically with naproxen/metoclopramide (with about a 4-fold and 3-fold reduction of doses in the ESL-naproxen and ESL-metoclopramide combination, respectively). Conclusions: ESL interacted in a beneficial manner with several analgesics that are used for trigeminal pain treatment, producing synergistic interactions with naproxen/metoclopramide and additive interactions with paracetamol/propyphenazone/zolmitriptan. Our results suggest that combining ESL with analgesics could theoretically enable the use of lower doses of individual drugs for achieving pain relief.",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
journal = "Psychopharmacology",
title = "Eslicarbazepine acetate interacts in a beneficial manner with standard and alternative analgesics to reduce trigeminal nociception",
volume = "237",
number = "5",
pages = "1435-1446",
doi = "10.1007/s00213-020-05470-7"
}
Pecikoza, U., Tomić, M., Micov, A., Vuković, M.,& Stepanović-Petrović, R.. (2020). Eslicarbazepine acetate interacts in a beneficial manner with standard and alternative analgesics to reduce trigeminal nociception. in Psychopharmacology
Springer Nature., 237(5), 1435-1446.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-020-05470-7
Pecikoza U, Tomić M, Micov A, Vuković M, Stepanović-Petrović R. Eslicarbazepine acetate interacts in a beneficial manner with standard and alternative analgesics to reduce trigeminal nociception. in Psychopharmacology. 2020;237(5):1435-1446.
doi:10.1007/s00213-020-05470-7 .
Pecikoza, Uroš, Tomić, Maja, Micov, Ana, Vuković, Milja, Stepanović-Petrović, Radica, "Eslicarbazepine acetate interacts in a beneficial manner with standard and alternative analgesics to reduce trigeminal nociception" in Psychopharmacology, 237, no. 5 (2020):1435-1446,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-020-05470-7 . .

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