The reason why the effectiveness of some painkillers is different between women and men has been identified in a new study.
The reason why the effectiveness of some painkillers is different between women and men has been identified in a new study. While it has been recognized since the mid-nineties that some narcotic analgesics are more effective in women than men, the reason for this difference was largely unknown.
Narcotic analgesics decrease pain by activating opioid receptors, which are located on nerves that transmit painful sensations.
Since levels of mu, delta, and kappa opiate receptors-the three main types of opioid receptor in the brain and spinal cord-are not thought to differ dramatically in men and women, it was difficult to understand why the effectiveness of some painkillers is dependent on sex.
Now, the new research by researchers at the State University of New York revealed that the same major types of opioid receptor interact differently, depending on sex.
The spinal cord of female laboratory animals was found to contain almost five times more kappa-mu heterodimer-a complex of mu-opioid and kappa-opioid receptor-than the spinal cord of male animals.
The study further suggests that kappa-mu opioid receptor heterodimers could function as a molecular switch that shifts the action of kappa-opioid receptors and endogenous chemicals that act on them from pain promoting to pain alleviating.
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Alan Gintzler, PhD, professor of biochemistry, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and his senior collaborators Sumita Chakrabarti, PhD, and Nai-Jiang Liu, PhD, at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center, conducted the research.
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Source-ANI