Drinking-Related Tetrahydroharmans Counteract the Membrane Effects of Local Anesthetic Lidocaine

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Drinking-Related Tetrahydroharmans Counteract the Membrane Effects of Local Anesthetic Lidocaine

Authors
  • Hironori Tsuchiya1
  • Maki Mizogami2
Type
Published Article
Journal
Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research
Publisher
Ashdin Publishing
Publication Date
Dec 24, 2014
Volume
3
Pages
1–6
Identifiers
DOI: 10.4303/jdar/235887
Source
Ashdin
Keywords
License
Green

Abstract

There is a general consensus in dentistry that successful local anesthesia is frequently difficult in habitual drinkers and alcoholic patients. Neuro-active tetrahydroharmans increase in human body fluids and tissues by consuming alcoholic beverages. To understand such reduced anesthetic efficacy by the drug interaction hypothesis, we studied the influences of drinking-related tetrahydroharmans on membrane fluidization as one of local anesthetic mechanisms. Lipo-somal membranes prepared with phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol were treated with lidocaine and different tetrahydroharmans separately and in combination, followed by measuring fluorescence polarization to determine their induced changes in membrane fluidity. In contrast to 0.1–2 mg/mL lidocaine, tetrahydroharmans decreased the fluidity of membrane preparations at ∼ 25 μg/mL with the potency being 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroharman 1,2,3,4-tetrahydronorharman. 1,2,3,4-Tetrahydroharman counteracted the membrane-fluidizing effects of 1 mg/mL lidocaine at physiologically relevant 0.25–2.5 ng/mL, whereas neither its 6-hydroxyl nor 7-hydroxyl metabolite did at 25–200 ng/mL. Such counteraction at a membrane lipid level may be responsible for the reduction of local anesthetic efficacy in drinkers because 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroharman increases in vivo by ingesting alcoholic beverages.

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