Abstract

ObjectiveThe quaternary lidocaine derivative (QX-314) in combination with bupivacaine can produce long-lasting nerve blocks in vivo, indicating potential clinical application. The aim of the study was to investigate the efficacy, safety, and the optimal formulation of this combination.MethodsQX-314 and bupivacaine at different concentration ratios were injected in the vicinity of the sciatic nerve in rats; bupivacaine and saline served as controls (n = 6~10). Rats were inspected for durations of effective sensory and motor nerve blocks, systemic adverse effects, and histological changes of local tissues. Mathematical models were established to reveal drug-interaction, concentration-effect relationships, and the optimal ratio of QX-314 to bupivacaine.Results0.2~1.5% QX-314 with 0.03~0.5% bupivacaine produced 5.8~23.8 h of effective nerve block; while 0.5% bupivacaine alone was effective for 4 h. No systemic side effects were observed; local tissue reactions were similar to those caused by 0.5% bupivacaine if QX-314 were used < 1.2%. The weighted modification model was successfully established, which revealed that QX-314 was the main active ingredient while bupivacaine was the synergist. The formulation, 0.9% QX-314 plus 0.5% bupivacaine, resulted in 10.1 ± 0.8 h of effective sensory and motor nerve blocks.ConclusionThe combination of QX-314 and bupivacaine facilitated prolonged sciatic nerve block in rats with a satisfactory safety profile, maximizing the duration of nerve block without clinically important systemic and local tissue toxicity. It may emerge as an alternative approach to post-operative pain treatment.

Highlights

  • More than 200 million people undergo invasive procedures or surgeries every year all around the world [1]

  • QX-314 and bupivacaine at different concentration ratios were injected in the vicinity of the sciatic nerve in rats; bupivacaine and saline served as controls (n = 6~10)

  • The action of traditional local anesthetics seldom lasts over 8 h in adults [2], while the intense postoperative pain usually exists for 1–3 days [3]

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Summary

Introduction

More than 200 million people undergo invasive procedures or surgeries every year all around the world [1]. Most of them need postoperative pain management. Used narcotic analgesics (opioids) and non-steroid anti-inflammation drugs (NSAIDs) can cause systemic adverse effects such as vomit, nausea, respiratory depression, gastro-intestinal bleeding, and renal function impairment. Speaking, local anesthetics provide pain relief in a safe way. The action of traditional local anesthetics seldom lasts over 8 h in adults [2], while the intense postoperative pain usually exists for 1–3 days [3]. Developing long-lasting local anesthetics, is in great needs

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