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Local anaesthesia helps cure bowel disease

Local anesthesia helps cure bowel disease

Reported October 11, 2010

Local anesthetics are likely to have potential therapeutic effects on inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), according to a new study.

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a disease of the gastrointestinal tract, mainly the intestines that may occur in the people who have genetic potential with a contribution of environmental factors. There has been no definitive medical treatment and drugs usually help the symptoms just to relieve.

Local anaesthetics are used to locally desensitise the tissues to allow surgical interventions. However, their mechanism of action is based on their potential to inhibit neuronal activity in the area. Since it is proposed that IBD may be a result of imbalance in the autonomic neurons of the colon, local anaesthetics have the potential to reduce the inflammation at the site of the colon that are affected by IBD.

In a recent experimental study, investigators from Uludag University School of Medicine, Bursa, Turkey investigated the possible therapeutic effects of local anaesthetics on IBD. They topically applied levobupivacaine, which is a novel, long lasting local anaesthetic with less systemic side effects onto the colonic mucosa of the rats that had had experimentally induced IBD.

The researchers used some scoring systems that evaluated the inflammation at the site of drug application. They compared the local anaesthetics to saline solution. They found some improvement in the degree of macroscopic inflammation at the areas where local anaesthetics were applied; however, those findings were not supported by microscopic findings. Nevertheless, the research team concluded that local anaesthetics might have potential therapeutic effects on IBD.

The study appears in the World Journal of Gastroenterology.

 

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