Abstract
The effect of the local anaesthetics lidocaine, procaine and tetracaine on compound 48/80-induced histamine release from isolated rat mast cells has been investigated. They inhibited histamine release in a dose-dependent manner; at a concentration of 20 mM there was almost total inhibition of histamine release by lidocaine and about 75% inhibition by procaine. Tetracaine exerted a biphasic effect: at concentrations below 1 mM it inhibited, but at concentrations above 1 mM it potentiated histamine release. The inhibitory effect of lidocaine on compound 48/80-evoked histamine release was dependent upon the time of preincubation of mast cells with this anaesthetic and it persisted after washing the cells and resuspension in a lidocaine-free medium. An increase of calcium ions antagonized the inhibitory action of lidocaine. These results can be explained by (1) blockade of membrane receptors for calcium binding which leads to a decrease in intracellular calcium concentration and (2) increase of cellular cyclic AMP content which subsequently inhibits the releasing process.
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