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Comparative Analysis of Intrathecal Lidocaine Combined With Guanfacine or Dexmedetomidine on Nociceptive and Motor Blockade in Rats

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine the effects of intrathecal lidocaine combined with guanfacine or dexmedetomidine on nociceptive and motor blockade, in comparison to clonidine. Using a rat model of intrathecal injection, we evaluated the effects of lidocaine combined with guanfacine, dexmedetomidine, or clonidine on nociceptive and motor blockade. The dose-dependent effects of guanfacine on spinal nociceptive and motor blockade were compared to those of lidocaine, a well-known local anesthetic. Guanfacine (0.46 μmol/kg, 3 mM), dexmedetomidine (0.02 μmol/kg, 0.1 mM), or clonidine (1.52 μmol/kg, 10 mM) alone produced no spinal nociceptive or motor blockade. Co-administration of guanfacine (0.46 μmol/kg) or dexmedetomidine (0.02 μmol/kg) with lidocaine (3.14 or 8.38 μmol/kg) prolonged the duration of spinal blockade, an effect attenuated by yohimbine (0.76 μmol/kg), which alone produced no spinal nociceptive or motor blockade. In contrast, the addition of clonidine (1.52 μmol/kg) did not enhance the duration of lidocaine-induced spinal blockade. Guanfacine produced a dose-dependent spinal blockade of both nociceptive and motor functions. The potency ranking (ED50, 50% effective dose) of spinal blockade showed that guanfacine and lidocaine were equal. Guanfacine resulted in a markedly longer spinal block duration than lidocaine at equivalent anesthetic doses (ED25, ED50, and ED75). In summary, co-administration of subeffective doses of guanfacine or dexmedetomidine with lidocaine prolonged the duration of spinal blockade, likely involving α2-adrenergic receptors, whereas subeffective doses of clonidine did not. Guanfacine produced dose-dependent spinal blockade and was equipotent to lidocaine. At equianesthetic doses, guanfacine produced a longer duration of blockade than lidocaine.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70057
JournalFundamental and Clinical Pharmacology
Volume39
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025 Dec

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Pharmacology
  • Pharmacology (medical)

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