Paracetamol-Induced Hypothermia in Rodents: A Review on Pharmacodynamics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Short History of the Research Regarding the Mechanisms of Paracetamol-Induced Analgesic and Antipyretic Effects
1.2. Recent Developments on Paracetamol’s Analgesic and Antipyretic Effects
1.3. The Role of Paracetamol in Inducing Hypothermia as a Therapeutic Option
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Considerations Regarding the Methods Used in the Studies Analysed
4.2. Lack of Hypothermic Effect after COX-1 or/and COX-2 Inhibition, but Possibly after Inhibition of (Some) Cyclooxygenase-1 Variant Enzymes
4.3. Trials in Humans Concerning Hypothermia after Paracetamol
4.4. The Serotoninergic, Opioid, Nociceptin, Cannabinoid, Endothelin, GABA-ergic Systems, and Mitochondrial-Related Functions Involvment in Paracetamol’s Hypothermic Effect
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- The pharmacological inhibition of FAAH did not reduce the hypothermic effect of paracetamol;
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- FAAH K.O. mice that received paracetamol presented a similar hypothermic effect to that recorded in wild type (WT) mice;
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- The CB1 and TRPV1 antagonists did not reduce the hypothermic effect of paracetamol; and
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- When using K.O. mice, CB1R K.O., or TRPV1 K.O., the hypothermic effect was similar to that recorded in WT mice.
4.5. Anti-Hyperthermic or Antipyretic Effects of Paracetamol
4.6. TRPA1′s Role in Paracetamol-Induced Hypothermia
5. Conclusions
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- Paracetamol’s hypothermic action is due to the inhibition of a COX-1 variant (probably constitutive), and its antipyretic action is due to the inhibition of COX-2;
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- Mitochondrial-related functions are involved in paracetamol’s hypothermic effect;
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- Endothelin receptor antagonists potentiate the hypothermic effect of paracetamol;
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- Opioid receptor (µ, ĸ, or δ) antagonists or nociceptin (NOP) receptor antagonists have no effect on paracetamol-induced hypothermia;
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- Cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonists do not influence paracetamol-induced hypothermia;
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- Paracetamol has no involvement on the serotoninergic system concerning hypothermia (as opposed to its analgesic effect);
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- Paracetamol’s hypothermic effect is mediated somehow through GABAA receptors;
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- TRPV1 has no effect on paracetamol-induced hypothermia; and
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- TRPA1 is involved in the hypothermic response to paracetamol, possibly via NAPQI, a paracetamol metabolite produced in CNS.
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- A favorable one, regarding its protective cellular action against brain ischemia; and
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- An unfavorable one, regarding its toxicity on mitochondrial function and the inhibition of lipolysis.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study, Reference | Subjects’ Species; Strain or Transgenic Animals Used; Gender; Groups N | Study Design—Temperature Measurements, Paracetamol Doses, Routes, Substances for Interactions | Results; Authors’ Conclusions; |
---|---|---|---|
Our Remarks | |||
Li S. et al., 2008 [37] | M; C57BL/6J (WT) COX-1 K.O.; G-ns; N = 6 (in all exp) | CBT recorded every 2 min with a thermo-couple inserted 2 cm into the colon and taped to the tail, plus a thermometer | |
P 80, 120, 140, 160 mg/kg, i.v. LPS—E. coli used for inducing fever, P administered 1 h before and 1 h after LPS. | Hypothermia registered at P 160 mg/kg in both WT and COX-1 KO M. LPS 1 h after P 80, 120, 140 mg/kg ↑ CBT as in veh; LPS following P160 mg/kg adm ↑ CBT in hypothermic M. P 80 and 160 mg/kg, 1 h after LPS-induced fever, ↓ CBT. ↓ CBT in COX-1 K.O. M comparable with ↓ showed in WT M in P 80 mg/kg 1 h after LPS. | ||
P hypothermia induced in non-febrile mice did not involve COX-1 | |||
Corley G. et al., 2009 [38] | R; Sprague–Dawley G-m; N = 6–11 (in all exp) | CBT measured with a thermistor probe, inserted 6 cm into the rectum, plus a digital thermometer. | |
(a) P 100, 250, 375, 500 mg/kg i.p. | (a) Only the highest dose of P (500 mg/kg) ↓CBT. | ||
(b) Naltrexone (μ receptor antagonist) 10 mg/kg sc, 2 adm. Naltrindole (δ receptor antagonist), 1 mg/kg s.c. Nor-BNI (κ receptor antagonist) 10 mg/kg i.p. SR 141716A (CB1 receptor antagonist), 5mg/kg i.m. JTC-801 (NOP receptor antagonist) 1mg/kg, i.p., P400 mg/kg (after antagonists adm, except of naltrexone adm in 2 doses prior and after P). | (b) P 400 mg/kg alone produced hypothermia that was not significantly different from the hypothermia produced by each of µ/ĸ/δ antagonists, MOP antagonist, or CB1 antagonist + P 400 mg/kg. | ||
Opioid, MOP, and CB1 receptors were not involved in P-induced hypothermia. | |||
Briyal S. et al., 2010 [39] | R; Sprague–Dawley G-m; N = 6 (in each group) | CBT measured using a thermometer with colonic probe. | |
P 300 mg/kg, i.p. + BQ123 (endothelin receptor antagonist) 1 mg/kg, i.v. A rat model of MCA occlusion was used. Substances were administered three times: (1) at 30 min after MCA occlusion, (2) at the time of reperfusion, and (3) 2 h after reperfusion. | P 300 mg/kg, i.p. alone produced a ↓ CBT, and PARA + BQ123 produced an even greater hypothermic response in R (41%) when compared with the adm of P alone. | ||
BQ123 enhanced the hypothermic effect of P and may reduce the lesions following cerebral ischemia | |||
Ayoub S.S. et al., 2011 [40] | M; C57BL/6 and COX-1 K.O: and COX-2 K.O: Biozzi ABH, ABH CB1 receptor K.O. and FAAH K.O. and TRPV1 K.O. G-m; N = 5–6 for each experiment | BT was measured with a thermocouple probe placed under the hindlimb. | |
(a) CB1 receptor K.O. M treated with P 300 mg/kg i.p. | (a) CB1R K.O. M treated with P 300 mg/kg i.p. ↓ BT after 1 h. The effect is consistent with those seen in C57BL/6 M. | ||
(b) C57BL/6 M treated with AM251 (CB1 receptor antagonist) i.p. 5 mg/kg, or/and P 300 mg/kg; AM251 5 mg/kg and WIN55212,2 (CB1/CB2 receptor agonist) 20 mg/kg i.p. | (b) AM251 inhibited the hypothermic response induced by WIN55212,2. AM251 did not prevent the ↓ of BT produced by P. | ||
(c) TRPV1 K.O. M treated with P 300 mg/kg i.p. | (c) TRPV1 K.O. M treated with P 300 mg/kg i.p. ↓ BT after 1 h. The hypothermic effect of P is not mediated through TRPV1 receptors. | ||
(d) C57BL/6 M treated with SB366791 (TRPV1 antagonist) 2 mg/kg i.p. or veh + (I) Capsaicin (TRPV1 agonist) 1 mg/kg s.c. or (II) P 300 mg/kg i.p. | (d) SB366791 + P 300 mg/kg i.p. ↓ BT as in animals treated with P alone. SB366791 produced a 2 °C reversal of capsaicin hypothermia. | ||
(e) C57BL/6 M treated with AM404 (a metabolite of P that also activates the endocannabinoid system) at doses of 10, 20, and 40 mg/kg i.p. | (e) AM404 adm alone did not induce hypothermia. | ||
(f) C57BL/6 M treated with: URB597 (a selective inhibitor of FAAH) 0.3 mg/kg i.p. (pretreated) or veh. + (I) Anandamide (principal endocannabinoid) 5 mg/kg i.p. or (II) P 300 mg/kg i.p. | (f) AM404 pathways do not mediate the hypothermic effect of P. | ||
(g) FAAH (fatty acid amide hydrolase) K.O. M treated with P 300 mg/kg i.p. compared with C57BL/6 treated with P 300 mg/kg i.p. | (g) P ↓ BT (measured 1 h after adm) to the same extent in FAAH K.O. M, as well as in C57BL/6 M. FAAH pathways do not mediate the hypothermic effect of P. | ||
(h) C57BL/6 M treated with P 200 mg/kg i.p. or WIN55-212,2 5 mg/kg i.p. or WIN55-212,2 5mg/kg i.p. + P 200 mg/kg i.p. | (h) WIN55-212,2 + P 200 mg/kg resulted in ↓ BT by 5.75 and 9.25 °C after 0.5 and 1 h, respectively, compared with veh. P in lower doses co-administered with WIN55-212,2 induces additive hypothermia. | ||
Five findings result from this article:
| |||
Gentry S. et al.,2015 [41] | M; C57BL/6 and TRPA1 K.O. TRPV1 K.O. and TRPA1 and TRPV1 K.O. (double knockout) G-f and m N = 6–12 for each exp | CBT was measured with a chip incorporated with a thermometer subcutaneously implanted in the shoulder of M. | |
(a) C57BL/6 M and TRPA1 K.O. M treated with P 300 mg/kg s.c. | (a) P 300 mg/kg s.c. ↓ CBT in C57BL/6 M, but not in TRPA1 K.O. M. | ||
(b) C57BL/6 M treated with P 100 μg intrathecally. | (b) P 100 μg intrathecally did not reduce CBT but produced analgesia. Hypothermia does not contri-bute to the spinal analgesia in M. | ||
(c) C57BL/6 M and TRPA1 K.O. M prior treated with RTX (TRPV1 agonist), 6.3 μg/kg s.c. recieved P 300 mg/kg s.c. | (c) RTX 6.3 μg/kg s.c. provided a prolonged ↓ CBT both in C57BL/6 and TRPA1 K.O. Both TRPV1 and TRPA1 receptors are involved in the hypothermic response of P. | ||
(d) C57BL/6 M treated with indomethacin (nonselective COX1 COX2 inh) 10 mg/kg s.c. + P 300 mg/kg s.c. | (d) Indomethacin did not modify CBT. Indomethacin + P did not inhibit the hypothermic effect of P. P hypothermic effect acts independently of COX-1 and COX-2. | ||
(e) C57BL/6 M treated with CHEM 5861528 (TRPA1 antagonist) 40 mg/kg p.o., CHEM 5861528 100 mg/kg p.o., or CHEM 5861528 300 mg/kg p.o. Then, P 300 mg/kgc s.c. | (e) CHEM5861528 inhibited the hypothermic effect of P in a dose-dependent manner. The highest dose, 300 mg/kg p.o., abolished the hypothermic effect of P. | ||
(f) C57BL/6 M treated with BCTP (TRPV1 antagonist) 30 mg/kg p.o., then P 300 mg/kg s.c. C57BL/6 and TRPV1 K.O. treated with P 300 mg/kg s.c. | (f) The CBT was not different in C57BL/6 M and TRPV1 K.O. M before the exp. TRPV1 antagonist BCTP 30 mg/kg p.o. administered in C57BL/6 M ↑ CBT, but did not inhibit the hypothermia induced by the adm of P 300 mg/kg s.c. P 300 mg/kg s.c. identically ↓ CBT both in C57BL/6 M and TRPV1 K.O. M. | ||
(g) C57BL/6, TRPV1 K.O, TRPA1 K.O., TRPA1 and TRPV1 K.O. (double-knockout) M were treated with yeast s.c. to induce pyrexia (1 °C) and then with P300 mg/kg s.c. | (g) Yeast induced similar ↑ CBT in C57BL/6, TRPV1 K.O., TRPA1 K.O., and in TRPA1 and TRPV1 K.O. (double-knockout) M. P 300 mg/kg s.c. induced hypothermia in C57BL/6 M and TRPV1 K.O. M, but acted only as an antipyretic in TRPA1 K.O. M and to the TRPA1 and TRPV1 K.O. (double K.O.) M, restoring CBT to the pre-yeast adm temperature. | ||
(h) C57BL/6 M and TRPA1 and TRPV1 double K.O. M treated with yeast s.c. + indomethacin 30 mg/kg s.c. + P 300 mg/kg s.c. | (h) Indomethacin restored CBT to the time of pre-yeast adm both in C57BL/6 M and TRPA1 and TRPV1 double K.O. M Indomethacin 30 mg/kg s.c. + P 300 mg/kg resulted in hypothermia in C57BL/6 M, but not in TRPA1 K.O. M and TRPV1 K.O. M. In TRPA1 K.O. M and TRPV1 K.O. M, the temperature decrease continued later with a small reduction in CBT both in indomethacin + P, as well as indomethacin + veh. | ||
TRPV1 is not involved in P-induced hypothermia. TRPA1 mediates P-evoked hypothermia. | |||
Ahangar N. et al., 2015 [42] | R; Sprague–Dawley G-m; N = 7 for each exp. | CBT—measured with a digital thermometer lubricated and inserted 4 cm into the rectum. | |
(a) P 100, 200, or 300 mg/kg i.p. | (a) P produces a dose- and time-dependent hypothermic effect. A suboptimal dose of P was then chosen for the next exp. | ||
(b) P 200 mg/kg i.p. or P 200 mg. kg i.p. + flumazenil (BZD receptor antagonist, part of GABAA receptor) 10 mg/kg i.p. or P 200 mg/kg i.p. + picrotoxin (GABAA antagonist) 2 mg/kg i.p. | (b) The combination of P 200 mg/kg i.p. with flumazenil 10 mg/kg i.p. reduced the hypothermic effect of P. The addition of picrotoxin 2 mg/kg i.p. in R treated with P 200 mg/kg i.p. reduced the hypothermic effect of P. | ||
P’s hypothermic effect might be mediated (in part) through the GABAA receptors. | |||
Fukushima A. et al., 2017 [43] | M; Ddy 4–6 weeks old. G-n.s. N = 10–20 for each exp involving P | CBT was measured with a digital thermometer linked with a probe inserted 25 mm into the rectum. | |
(a) PCPA 300 mg/kg i.p. for 5 days + P 200 mg/kg i.p. or P 300 mg/kg i.p. (b) Cyproheptadine hydrochloride (H1 blocker with serotonin properties) 0.3 mg/kg, i.p. + P 200 mg/kg i.p. fluoxetine hydrochloride (serotonin-specific reuptake inhibitor) 3 mg/kg, i.p. + P 200 mg/kg i.p. | (a) P 300 mg/kg i.p. significantly ↓ CBT in PCPA group. P200 mg/kg i.p. had no significant effect on CBT. (b) The combination of fluoxetine with P or of cyproheptadine with P did not influence the hypothermic effect of P. | ||
The hypothermic effect of P is not mediated by the serotoninergic system. | |||
Mirrasekhian et al., 2018 [44] | M; C57BL/6 and TRPA1 K.O. G-f and m N = 4–20 for each exp | CBT was measured with a digital thermometer linked with a probe inserted 25 mm into the rectum. | |
(a) C57BL/6 M treated with P 100, 150, or 200 mg/kg i.p. | (a) P 200 mg/kg i.p. produced hypothermia, whereas P100 and 150 mg/kg i.p. did not. | ||
(b) TRPA1 K.O. M treated with P 200 mg/kg i.p. | (b) P200 mg/kg i.p. adm in C57BL/6 M produced hypothermia, but not in TRPA1 K.O. M. | ||
(c) C57BL/6 treated with NAC (precursor of glutathione, NAPQI scavenger) 1 g/kg + P 200 mg/kg | (c) NAC decreases the hypothermic effect of P. | ||
(d) C57BL/6 M and TRPA1 K.O. M treated with LPS 100 µg/kg i.p. (pretreatment) + P 150 mg/kg i.p. | (d) P150 mg/kg does not elicit hypothermia, but does normalize body temperature after LPS administration in both C57BL/6 M and TRPA1 K.O. M. The P group suffered an important, but transient, ↓ CBT. | ||
TRPA1 receptors might not be involved in the antipyretic effect of P. P hypothermia could involve NAPQI. | |||
Ayoub S.S. et al., 2019 [45] | M; C57BL/6J and COX-1 K.O.; G-m; N = 3–5 for each exp | BT—measured with temperature-sensitive transponders, implanted s.c., and with a sensitive scanner held 3 cm above the back of the M. To obtain a significant pyrexia, M were transferred into a warm air system at 30 °C, and after 1h, LPS was adm i.p. | |
(a) C57BL/6J treated with LPS 10 µg/kg i.p and then received: SC560 15 mg/kg i.p. (COX 1 inhibitor), Celecoxib 15 mg/kg i.p. (COX 2 inhibitor), or P 300 mg/kg i.p. | (a) P 300 mg/kg i.p. induced significant hypothermia, with ↓ CBT with a decrease of 2.5 °C after 0.5 h and 3.63 °C after 1 h. Neither SC560 (15 mg/kg) or celecoxib (15 mg/kg) had hypothermic effects. | ||
(b) WT and COX-1 K.O. M were treated with P 200 mg/kg s.c., then treated with LPS 10 µg/kg i.p. compared with WT and COX-1 K.O. M were treated with indomethacin (non-selective dual COX-1/COX-2 inhibitor) 5 mg/kg s.c. and 10 mg/kg s.c. LPS 10 µg/kg i.p. | (b) Prophylactic adm of P 200 mg/kg s.c. did not have a hypothermic or antipyretic effect in COX-1 K.O. M when compared to the COX-1 K.O. M treated with veh. The fever observed in COX-1 K.O. M lasted longer than in WT M treated with LPS. Indomethacin did not induce hypothermia (ambient temp = 24 °C), but after pyrexia was induced with LPS, indomethacin 5 mg/kg s.c. ↓ fever induced by LPS (ambient temp = 30 °C). | ||
(c) WT M and COX-1 K.O. M received LPS 10 µg/kg i.p. to induce pyrexia and then treated with P 200 mg/kg s.c. | (c) In COX-1 K.O. M, P ↓ febrile BT post-LPS non-significantly by approx. 0.67 °C after 1 h, with BT between 35.8 to 35.93 °C. In WT M, P ↓ febrile BT significantly with approx. 4.56 °C after 1 h post-administration. PGE2 synthesis was abolished in COX-1 K.O. M. treated with P. | ||
A target for the P-induced hypothermia is not COX-1 and it is likely to be a variant of COX-1. |
Study; Reference | Experimental Model | Species, System, Analysis | Treatment | Effects |
---|---|---|---|---|
Li S., 2007 [37] | “ex vivo” PGE2 concentration evaluation | M blood, brain; enzyme immunoassay kit was used | P 160 mg/kg i.v. | P did not influence brain and plasma levels of PGE2 of non-febrile WT M at 1, 2, or 3 h after adm P produced an immediate ↓ of the elevated brain PGE2 level of M treated with LPS to its basal value within 1 h (2 h after LPS); PGE2 then ↑ to its pre-P high level in 1 h. |
Briyal A., 2010 [39] | “ex vivo” evaluation of MDA and GSH activity in the brain | R brain | P 300 mg/kg, i.p. + BQ123 (endothelin receptor antagonist) 1 mg/kg, i.v. | P did not but BQ123 alone and in combination with P ↓ MDA and ↑ GSH levels in ischaemic rats with MCA occlusion, and combination of P and BQ123 was more effective in reducing the neuronal damage following cerebral ischaemia. |
Ayuob S.S., 2011 [40] | “ex vivo” evaluation of PGE2 concentrations in the brain | C57BL/6, CB1R K.O. M brain, an enzyme immunoassay kit was used | P 300 mg/kg i.p. | The brain PGE2 concentration of CB1R K.O. M was also compared 1 h after 300 mg/kg P or veh treatments. Paracetamol reduced brain PGE2 levels in CB1R K.O. M compared to veh-treated M. |
Mirrasekhian E., 2018 [44] | “ex vivo” evaluation of PGE2, PGF2α, 6-keto-PGF1α (a stable metabolite of PGI2), and TXB2 (a stable metabolite of TXA2) | M blood, brain; HPLC system coupled to a tandem mass spectrometer | LPS (100 µg/kg i.p.) or saline was administered 4 h prior to i.p. injection of P (150 mg/kg) or veh | P completely suppressed the LPS induced ↑ of PGE2 in the brain, and ↓ the levels of some other prostanoids in brain and in blood. |
Ayoub S.S., 2019 [45] | (a) “ex vivo” evaluation of PGE2 concentrations in the brain (b) evaluation of P plasma concentration | (a) M blood, brain; enzyme immunoassay kit was used; (b) the adm of P to WT M (C57BL/6 J); the concentration of P was measured using a colorimetric method | (a) 200 mg/kg P i.p. (b) s.c. adm of 200 mg/kg P, plasma was collected from M at 0.5, 1, 2, 3, and 4 h | The comparisons of the effect of 200 mg/kg P on hypothalamic PGE2 levels 1 h after P adm (and 3 h after LPS), between COX-1 WT M and COX-1 K.O. M showed a decrease in PGE2 in W.T. M but not in transgenic M, signifying that LPS-induced fever is PGE2-mediated and COX-2-dependent At the dose of 15 mg/kg, SC560 (COX-1 blocker without hypothermic action, independent of doses used) reduced the brain PGE2 synthesis by 76%. |
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Coman, L.; Păunescu, H.; Ghiță, C.I.V.; Țincu, R.C.; Vasile, S.; Cinteza, D.; Fulga, I.; Coman, O.A. Paracetamol-Induced Hypothermia in Rodents: A Review on Pharmacodynamics. Processes 2022, 10, 687. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10040687
Coman L, Păunescu H, Ghiță CIV, Țincu RC, Vasile S, Cinteza D, Fulga I, Coman OA. Paracetamol-Induced Hypothermia in Rodents: A Review on Pharmacodynamics. Processes. 2022; 10(4):687. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10040687
Chicago/Turabian StyleComan, Laurențiu, Horia Păunescu, Cristina Isabel Viorica Ghiță, Radu Ciprian Țincu, Sorina Vasile, Delia Cinteza, Ion Fulga, and Oana Andreia Coman. 2022. "Paracetamol-Induced Hypothermia in Rodents: A Review on Pharmacodynamics" Processes 10, no. 4: 687. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10040687
APA StyleComan, L., Păunescu, H., Ghiță, C. I. V., Țincu, R. C., Vasile, S., Cinteza, D., Fulga, I., & Coman, O. A. (2022). Paracetamol-Induced Hypothermia in Rodents: A Review on Pharmacodynamics. Processes, 10(4), 687. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10040687