Effects of the potent analgesic enkephalin-catabolizing enzyme inhibitors RB101 and kelatorphan on respiration

2001 
Abstract We investigated whether the enkephalin-catabolizing enzyme inhibitors RB101 and kelatorphan, which have been shown to be potent analgesics, depress respiration as do opioid analgesics. Ventilation was measured in cats and rodents by the barometric method, in the awake state and during anesthesia. Tissue distribution of the inhibitors was either generalized (RB101, 40–160 mg/kg i.p.), largely restricted by the blood–brain barrier to the periphery (kelatorphan, 0.7–20 mg/kg i.v.), or restricted to the brainstem (i.c.v. injection of RB101 in the fourth ventricle). RB101 did not affect ventilation in any condition tested, and large doses of kelatorphan produced a naloxone-reversible increase in ventilation and breathing frequency. Thus endogenous opioids released during conditions of normal ventilation do not exert any depressant neuromodulatory effect on this function, even when their extracellular concentrations are increased by peptidase inhibitors. The differential effect of these inhibitors on ventilation and nociception is discussed. We conclude that kelatorphan and RB101 are devoid of respiratory-depressant effects and might be interesting pharmacological alternatives to morphine and other opioid agonists.
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