Cannabinoids and Pain
- 1 January 2007
- book chapter
- Published by Springer Nature
- No. 177,p. 265-306
- https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-33823-9_10
Abstract
Convincing evidence frompreclinical studies demonstrates that cannabinoids can reducepain responses ina rangeof inflammatory and neuropathicpain models. The anatomical and functional data reveal cannabinoid receptor-mediated analgesic actions operating at sites concerned with the transmission and processing of nociceptive signals in brain, spinal cord and the periphery. The precise signalling mechanisms by which cannabinoids produce analgesic effects at these sites remain unclear; however, significant clues point to cannabinoid modulation of the functions of neurone and immune cells that mediate nociceptive and inflammatory responses. Intracellular signalling mechanisms engaged by cannabinoid receptors—like the inhibition of calciumtransients and adenylate cyclase, and pre-synaptic modulation of transmitter release—have been demonstrated in some of these cell types and are predicted to play a role in the analgesic effects of cannabinoids. In contrast, the clinical effectiveness of cannabinoids as analgesics is less clear. Progress in this area requires the development of cannabinoids with a more favourable therapeutic index than those currently available for human use, and the testing of their efficacy and side-effects in high-quality clinical trials.Keywords
This publication has 249 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pain measurements and side effect profile of the novel cannabinoid ajulemic acidNeuropharmacology, 2005
- Identification and characterisation of a novel splice variant of the human CB1 receptorFEBS Letters, 2004
- The effect of WIN 55,212-2, a cannabinoid agonist, on tactile allodynia in diabetic ratsNeuroscience Letters, 2004
- Topical cannabinoid enhances topical morphine antinociceptionPain, 2003
- Effects of direct periaqueductal grey administration of a cannabinoid receptor agonist on nociceptive and aversive responses in ratsNeuropharmacology, 2003
- Cannabinoid CB1 Receptor Expression in Rat Spinal CordMolecular and Cellular Neuroscience, 2000
- Two distinctive antinociceptive systems in rats with pathological painNeuroscience Letters, 2000
- Analgesic effects of 1′,1′ dimethylheptyl-Δ8-THC-11-oic acid (CT3) in miceLife Sciences, 1998
- The peripheral cannabinoid receptor: adenylate cyclase inhibition and G protein couplingFEBS Letters, 1995
- Inhibition of noxious stimulus-evoked activity of spinal cord dorsal horn neurons by the cannabinoid WIN 55,212-2Life Sciences, 1995