Washington [US]: New substances that activate adrenalin receptors instead of opioid receptors have a similar pain-relieving effect to opiates, but without the negative aspects such as respiratory depression and addiction. New findings are a milestone in the development of non-opioid pain relief.
They are a blessing for patients suffering from severe pain, but they also have serious side effects: Opioids, and above all morphine, can cause nausea, dizziness and constipation and can also often cause slowed breathing that can even result in respiratory failure. In addition, opiates are addictive - a high percentage of the drug problem in the USA is caused by pain medication, for example.
In order to tackle the unwanted medical and social effects of opioids, researchers all over the world are searching for alternative analgesics. Prof. Dr. Peter Gmeiner, Chair of Pharmaceutical Chemistry is one of these researchers. "We are focusing particularly on the molecular structures of the receptors that dock onto the pharmaceutical substances," says Gmeiner.
"It is only when we understand these on the atomic level that we can develop effective and safe active substances." Collaborating with an international team of researchers, Prof. Gmeiner discovered an active substance in 2016 that bonds to known opioid receptors and that offers the same level of pain relief as morphine, even though it has no chemical similarity to opiates.
Peter Gmeiner is currently following a lead that seems very promising: "Many non-opioid receptors are involved in pain processing, but only a small number of these alternatives have as yet been validated for use in therapies," he explains. Gmeiner and a team of researchers from Erlangen, China, Canada and the USA have now turned their attention to a new receptor that is responsible for binding adrenaline - the alpha 2A adrenergic receptor.
There are already some analgesics that target this receptor such as brimonidine, clonidine and dexmedetomidine. Gmeiner: "Dexmedetomidine relieves pain, but has a strong sedative effect, which means its use is restricted to intensive care in hospital settings and is not suitable for broader patient groups."