Pharmaceuticals (Sep 2015)

Opioid Facilitation of β-Adrenergic Blockade: A New Pharmacological Condition?

  • Joseph Vamecq,
  • Karine Mention-Mulliez,
  • Francis Leclerc,
  • Dries Dobbelaere

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph8040664
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 664 – 674

Abstract

Read online

Recently, propranolol was suggested to prevent hyperlactatemia in a child with hypovolemic shock through β-adrenergic blockade. Though it is a known inhibitor of glycolysis, propranolol, outside this observation, has never been reported to fully protect against lactate overproduction. On the other hand, literature evidence exists for a cross-talk between β-adrenergic receptors (protein targets of propranolol) and δ-opioid receptor. In this literature context, it is hypothesized here that anti-diarrheic racecadotril (a pro-drug of thiorphan, an inhibitor of enkephalinases), which, in the cited observation, was co-administered with propranolol, might have facilitated the β-blocker-driven inhibition of glycolysis and resulting lactate production. The opioid-facilitated β-adrenergic blockade would be essentially additivity or even synergism putatively existing between antagonism of β-adrenergic receptors and agonism of δ-opioid receptor in lowering cellular cAMP and dependent functions.

Keywords