Islamabad, Dec 31 : Physicians use
inhalation anesthetics in a way that is incredibly safe for patients, but very
little is known about the intricacies of how these drugs actually work in
children and adults.
Now, researchers have uncovered what cells respond
to anesthesia in an organism known as the C. elegans, according to a new study
from the Seattle Children's Research Institute. C. elegans is a transparent
roundworm used often in research.
"Our findings tell us what cells and
channels are important in making the anesthetic work," said lead author Phil
Morgan, MD, researcher at Seattle Children's Research Institute and University
of Washington professor of anesthesiology and pain medicine. "The scientific
community has attempted to uncover the secrets of how anesthetics work since the
1860s, and we now have at least part of the answer." Margaret Sedensky, MD,
Seattle Children's Research Institute and a UW professor of anesthesiology and
pain medicine, and Vinod Singaram, graduate student, Case Western Reserve
University, are co-lead authors of the study.
The team studied the
roundworm after inserting a pigment or protein typically found in the retina of
a human eye -- called a retinal-dependent rhodopsin channel -- into its cells.
The proteins in cell membranes act as channels to help movement. Researchers
then used a blue light, activating channels in the roundworm that allowed the
immediate reversal of anesthetics, and resulting in the roundworm waking up and
seemingly swimming off the slide.
The team's findings won't immediately
translate into a discovery that would be available for humans, cautioned Dr.
Morgan, who has been working in this field for some 25 years. "But it tells us
what function we have to treat to try to do so," he said.
"We believe
that there is a class of potassium channels in humans that are crucial in this
process of how anesthetics work and that they are perhaps the ones that are
sensitive to potential anesthesia reversal. There are drugs for blocking these
channels and with these same drugs, maybe we can eventually reverse anesthesia."
Potassium channels are found in all living organisms and in most cell types, and
they control a wide variety of cell functions.
Anesthesia medications are
used in both children and adults, but many are used more often in kids. Dr.
Morgan and his colleagues plan to replicate the study in other animal models,
starting with a mouse.
Ends
SA/EN
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