Abstract

Neuropathic pain is often closely associated with nerve injury or inflammation, and the role of traditional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as adjuvants for treating chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathic pain remains unclear. In this study, the potential synergistic antinociceptive effects of indomethacin–pregabalin and meloxicam–pregabalin were evaluated in paclitaxel-induced neuropathic pain and carrageenan-induced inflammatory pain in rodents. Although indomethacin and meloxicam alone only slightly relieved mechanical allodynia in the above two models, isobolographic analysis showed that the combination of indomethacin or meloxicam with pregabalin produced significant synergistic antinociceptive effects for paclitaxel-induced neuropathic pain (IN-PGB, experimental ED25 = [4.41 (3.13–5.82)] mg/kg, theoretical ED25 = [8.50 (6.62–10.32)] mg/kg; MEL-PGB, experimental ED25 = [3.96 (2.62–5.46)] mg/kg, theoretical ED25 = [7.52 (5.73–9.39)] mg/kg). In addition, MEL-PGB dosed via intraplantar injection into the left paw, intragastric injection, or intraperitoneal injection reversed paclitaxel-induced allodynia, indicating that they may act at multiple sites in the neuroaxis and periphery. However, indomethacin–pregabalin and meloxicam–pregabalin exerted antagonistic antiallodynic interactions in carrageenan-induced inflammatory pain in rats. Taken together, coadministration of indomethacin or meloxicam with pregabalin may possess potential therapeutic advantages for treating chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain.

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