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Prolonged sensory-selective nerve blockade.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2010-02-06)
Itay Sagie, Daniel S Kohane
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Sensory-selective local anesthesia has long been a key goal in local anesthetic development. For example, it allows women to be pain-free during labor without compromising their ability to push. Here we show that prolonged sensory-selective nerve block can be produced by specific concentrations of surfactants-such as are used to enhance drug flux across skin-in combination with QX-314, a lidocaine derivative that has relative difficulty penetrating nerves. For example, injection of 25 mM QX-314 in 30 mM octyltrimethylammonium bromide (OTAB) lasted up to 7 h. Sensory selectivity was imparted to varying degrees by cationic, neutral, and anionic surfactants, and also was achieved with another lidocaine derivative, QX-222. Simultaneous injection of OTAB at a s.c. injection site remote from the sciatic nerve did not result in prolonged sensory-specific nerve blockade from QX-314, suggesting that the observed effect is due to a local interaction between the surfactant and the lidocaine derivative, not a systemic effect.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Trimethyloctylammoniumbromid, ≥98.0% (AT)
Sigma-Aldrich
Trimethyloctylammoniumchlorid, ≥97.0% (AT)