Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to examine the analgesic activity of six novel hybrid molecules, which demonstrated in the previous research anticonvulsant activity in the maximal electroshock seizure (MES) and subcutaneous pentylenetetrazole seizure (scPTZ) tests in mice. The antinociceptive properties were estimated in three models of pain in mice—the hot plate test, the formalin test, and in the oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy. Moreover, extended anticonvulsant studies were carried out and the antiseizure activity was investigated in the 6-Hz test. Considering drug safety evaluation, the influence of compounds on locomotor activity and contextual memory were checked. Furthermore, chosen molecules were tested in vitro for potential hepatotoxicity. To explain the probable mechanism of action, the radioligand binding assays were performed. In both phases of formalin test, analgesic activity demonstrated compounds 4, 8, and 9. These agents relieved also mechanical allodynia in oxaliplatin-induced model of neuropathic pain. At active doses, they did not influence locomotor activity of mice. Moreover, for compounds 8 and 9, no deleterious effect on memory was observed, but compound 4 might induce memory deficits. All tested compounds (4, 5, 8, 9, 15, and 16) inhibited psychomotor seizures with the ED50 values = 24.66–47.21 mg/kg. The binding studies showed that compound 4 only at the high concentrations revealed the effective binding to the neuronal sodium channels and moderately binding to the L-type calcium (verapamil site) channels and NMDA receptors. The present preclinical results proved that novel hybrid molecules demonstrate very promising anticonvulsant and analgesic activity.

Highlights

  • Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder that is associated with various types of recurrent convulsive and non-convulsive seizures

  • Some of anticonvulsant drugs that block these channels are effective in the treatment of neuropathic pain owing to the same selective block of high-frequency action potential firing that accounts for their protective activity against seizures

  • We demonstrated significant anticonvulsant activity of six new hybrid compounds in two classic animal models of epilepsy, maximal electroshock seizure (MES) and scPTZ tests (Kamiński et al 2015a)

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Summary

Introduction

Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder that is associated with various types of recurrent convulsive and non-convulsive seizures. Some of anticonvulsant drugs that block these channels are effective in the treatment of neuropathic pain owing to the same selective block of high-frequency action potential firing that accounts for their protective activity against seizures. Among these drugs, carbamazepine was found to be useful in the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia, whereas the gabapentinoids (like gabapentin and pregabalin) were efficacious drugs in diabetic neuropathic pain and post-herpetic neuralgia (Kukkar et al 2013; Mendlik and Uritsky 2015)

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