Brain Mysteries  
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to BrainMysteries.com RSS Feed Subscribe

Strong drugs without the addiction (11/24/2007)

Tags:
addiction, pain

Two University of Adelaide pharmacologists working with one the world's leading neuroscientists have helped pave the way for the development of new pain-killing drugs that are not addictive.

Professor of Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Adelaide, Paul Rolan, and postdoctoral fellow Dr Mark Hutchinson are part of a combined US and Australian research team which has made a breakthrough in revealing how opioid drugs such as morphine both relieve pain and also cause addiction.

The Adelaide scientists and senior colleagues at the University of Colorado, including world glia and pain expert Dr Linda Watkins, have isolated in animal models the effect that morphine has on the brain's immune cells, known as glia, and also on nerve cells (neurons).

Glial cells heighten nerve pain such as sciatica by exciting the neurons that transmit pain signals. While morphine deadens pain by acting at nerve synapses, it also activates glial cells, worsening the drug's side effects, such as drowsiness, tolerance and addiction.

The scientists tested a new drug called AV411 that blocks morphine's effects on glia but not on neurons, resulting in effective pain relief without the side effects of addiction. AV411 is being developed by Avigen Inc., a Californian biopharmaceutical company.

Vice President of Research & Development at Avigen, Dr Kirk Johnson, says the company is working in collaboration with Dr Hutchinson and Dr Watkins from the University of Colorado as well as Professor Paul Rolan from the University of Adelaide.

"Currently, AV411 is in clinical trials at the Royal Adelaide Hospital for neuropathic pain and we look forward to exploring this molecule in opioid withdrawal," Dr Johnson said.

"Doctors prescribe morphine for pain relief but opioids come with the potential for addiction or abuse," Dr Hutchinson says. "Our tests shows that by blocking morphine's effects on glial cells, it stops cravings for the drug."

These pre-clinical findings were reported earlier this month at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, the world's largest organisation of scientists devoted to the study of the brain. The prestigious international journal Science also published the findings last week.

The Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in the United States, Dr Nora Volkow, says the research "helps pave the way toward developing new, potent, non-addictive medications".

Dr Hutchinson graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree with First Class Honours from the University of Adelaide in 1999, majoring in microbiology, immunology and pharmacology. In 2005 he was awarded an American-Australian Association Fellowship and has been working with Dr Watkins in Colorado for the past three years.

He is now a NHMRC CJ Martin Postdoctoral Fellow, which will enable him to return to the University of Adelaide to continue working with his colleagues in the Discipline of Pharmacology.

Professor Paul Rolan this month addressed the 10th International Conference on the Mechanisms and Treatment of Neuropathic Pain held in Salt Lake City, Utah. He told delegates that summary data showed that AV411 was "a promising non-opioid clinical candidate for chronic neuropathic pain".

The other US scientists involved in the research include Dr Steven Maier from the Department of Psychology and Centre for Neuroscience at the University of Colorado and postdoctoral fellow Sondra Blond.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University of Adelaide

Loans - Credit Card - Arizona Pools - Car Insurance

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Memory impairment associated with sound processing disorder 7/26/2008

Closing coal-burning power plant in China and improved cognitive development in children 7/25/2008

Water-diffusion technology identifies brain regions damaged by prenatal alcohol exposure 7/25/2008

Magic is the trick to understanding the mind 7/24/2008

Aggressive preschoolers found to have fewer friends than others 7/24/2008

Team creates touch-based illusion 7/23/2008

Suckling infants trigger surges of trust hormone in mothers' brains 7/23/2008

Obsessive compulsive disorder linked to brain activity 7/22/2008

Brain switch clues to drug addiction 7/21/2008

Old eyes can learn new tricks; findings offer hope for adults with 'lazy eye' 7/20/2008

Positive Thinking is Prescription for the Heart 7/20/2008

Electrifying mind matter part of new research 7/19/2008

Do we think that machines can think? 7/19/2008

Money Makes the Heart Grow Less Fond ... but More Hardworking 7/18/2008

Decisions under pressure: it's all in the heart beat 7/18/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.