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Papers of the Week


2020 Jan 22


BMC Neurosci


21


1

Carbonyl-protein content increases in brain and blood of female rats after chronic oxycodone treatment.

Authors

Fan R, Schrott LM, Snelling S, Felty J, Graham D, McGauly PL, Arnold T, Korneeva NL
BMC Neurosci. 2020 Jan 22; 21(1):4.
PMID: 31969118.

Abstract

Opioids are the most effective drugs commonly prescribed to treat pain. Due to their addictive nature, opioid pain relievers are now second to marijuana, ahead of cocaine with respect to dependence. Ours and other studies suggest potential toxic effects of chronic opioid administration leading to neuronal degeneration. It has been suggested that protein carbonylation may represent a sensitive biomarker of cellular degeneration. To evaluate whether prolonged oxycodone administration is associated with accumulation of protein aggregates that may contribute to neuronal degeneration we measured protein carbonylation levels in brain and also in blood plasma of rats after 30-days of 15 mg/kg daily oxycodone administration.