Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/15350
Title: Pineal opioid receptors and analgesic action of melatonin
Authors: Ebadi M.
Govitrapong P.
Phansuwan-Pujito P.
Nelson F.
Reiter R.J.
Keywords: free radical
melatonin
melatonin derivative
melatonin receptor
morphine
mu opiate receptor
narcotic agent
opiate receptor
pineal body hormone
scavenger
analgesia
circadian rhythm
drug dependence
drug mechanism
human
hypnosis
nociception
nonhuman
oxidative stress
pineal body
pinealectomy
review
Issue Date: 1998
Abstract: Physicians have noted since antiquity that their patients complained of less pain and required fewer analgesics at night times. In most species, including the humans, the circulating levels of melatonin, a substance with analgesic and hypnotic properties, exhibit a pronounced circadian rhythm with serum levels being high at night and very low during day times. Moreover, melatonin exhibits maximal analgesic effects at night, pinealectomy abolishes the analgesic effects of melatonin, and mu opioid receptor antagonists disrupt the day-night rhythm of nociception. It is believed that melatonin, with its sedative and analgesic effects, is capable of providing a pain free sleep so that the body may recuperate and restore itself to function again at its peak capacity. Moreover, in conditions when pain is associated with extensive tissue injury, melatonin's ability to scavenge free radicals and abort oxidative stress is yet another beneficial effect to be realized. Since melatonin may behave as a mixed opioid receptor agonist-antagonist, it is doubtful that a physician simply could potentiate the analgesic efficacy of narcotics such as morphine by coadministering melatonin. Therefore, future research may synthesize highly efficacious melatonin analogues capable of providing maximum analgesia and hopefully being devoid of addiction liability now associated with currently available narcotics.
URI: https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/15350
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0031976633&doi=10.1111%2fj.1600-079X.1998.tb00532.x&partnerID=40&md5=b07fbb9566c627149368228388d04a76
ISSN: 7423098
Appears in Collections:Scopus 1983-2021

Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.


Items in SWU repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.