General Research Model: rat

Hydrogen-rich saline controls remifentanil-induced hypernociception and NMDA receptor NR1 subunit membrane trafficking through GSK-3β in the DRG in rats

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How Hydrogen-Rich Saline Fights Pain and Protects the Brain

A 2014 study found that hydrogen-rich saline can reduce pain sensitivity and protect the brain. The research used rats to investigate how hydrogen-rich saline affects the brain and nervous system, with promising results for pain relief and neuroprotection. This study is part of a larger body of research on the benefits of hydrogen gas for our health, including its potential for [fructooligosaccharide-pregnancy-oxidative-stress](/article/fructooligosaccharide-pregnancy-oxidative-stress).

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Abstract

Publish Year 2014 Country China Rank Positive Journal Brain Research Bulletin Primary Topic Brain Secondary TopicNeuroprotection Model Rat Tertiary TopicDrug Toxicity (Remifentanil) Vehicle Saline (Dissolved) pH Neutral Application Injection Comparison Complement

Background

Methods: To test these effects, hydrogen-rich saline (2.5, 5 or 10 ml/kg) was administrated intraperitoneally after remifentanil infusion, NMDAR antagonist MK-801 or GSK-3β inhibitor TDZD-8 was administrated intravenously before remifentanil infusion in rats. We examined time course of hydrogen concentration in blood after hydrogen-rich saline administration. Mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia were evaluated by measuring PWT and PWL for 48 post-infusion hours, respectively. Western blotting and real-time qPCR assay were applied to analyze the NR1 membrane trafficking, GSK-3β expression and activity in DRG. Inflammatory mediators (TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6) expressions in DRG were also analyzed.

Methods

Results: We found that NR1 membrane trafficking in DRG increased, possibly due to GSK-3β activation after remifentanil infusion. We also discovered that hydrogen-rich saline not 2.5 ml/kg but 5 and 10 ml/kg could dose-dependently attenuate mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia without affecting baseline nociceptive threshold, reduce expressions of inflammatory mediators (TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6) and decrease NR1 trafficking mediated by GSK-3β, and minimal effective concentration was observed to be higher than 10 μmol/L, namely peak concentration in arterial blood after administration of HRS 2.5 ml/kg without any influence on hyperalgesia.

Results

Conclusion: Our results indicated that antihyperalgesic effect of hydrogen-rich saline might depend predominantly on its ability to reverse NR1 trafficking via inhibition of GSK-3β activity in DRG in a dose-dependent manner.