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Dive into the research topics where Amanda R. Waxman is active.

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Featured researches published by Amanda R. Waxman.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2008

Sex-Specific Responses to Opiates : Animal and Human Studies

Albert Dahan; Benjamin Kest; Amanda R. Waxman; Elise Sarton

It is widely reported that analgesic drugs acting at &mgr;, &kgr;, and &dgr; opioid-receptors display quantitative and qualitative differences in effect in males and females. These sex-related differences are not restricted to the analgesic/antinociceptive properties of opioids, but are also present in opioid-induced side effects, such as changes in respiration, locomotor activity, learning/memory, addiction, and changes in the cardiovascular system. An increasing number of well-controlled animal and human studies directly examining the issue of sex in the potency of opioids show that, although sex may affect opioid analgesia, the direction and magnitude of sex differences depend on many interacting variables. These include those specific to the drug itself, such as dose, pharmacology, and route and time of administration, and those particular to the subject, such as species, type of pain, genetics, age, and gonadal/hormonal status. In the current review, we systematically present these animal and human studies and discuss the data in relation to the depending variables. Although the observed sex differences in opioid effect may be clinically relevant, lack of knowledge on other factors involved in the large variability in patient opioid analgesic sensitivity should compel practitioners to customize their dosing regimens based on individual requirements.


Anesthesiology | 2010

Sex-specific mediation of opioid-induced hyperalgesia by the melanocortin-1 receptor.

Aaron Juni; Minying Cai; Magda Stankova; Amanda R. Waxman; Caroline Arout; Gad Klein; Albert Dahan; Victor J. Hruby; Jeffrey S. Mogil; Benjamin Kest

Background:N-Methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonists reverse hyperalgesia during morphine infusion in male mice only. Because the melanocortin-1 receptor can act as a female-specific counterpart to N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors in &kgr;-opioid analgesic mechanisms, the authors assessed the contribution of melanocortin-1 receptors to the sex-specific mechanisms underlying morphine hyperalgesia. Methods:The tail-withdrawal test was used to compare the nociceptive responses of male and female C57BL/6J (B6) mice with those of C57BL/6J-Mc1re/e (e/e) mice, spontaneous mutants of the B6 background lacking functional melanocortin-1 receptors, during continuous morphine infusion (1.6 and 40.0 mgkg−1 · 24 h−1). Separate groups of hyperalgesic B6 and outbred CD-1 mice were injected with MK-801 or MSG606, selective N-methyl-d-aspartate and melanocortin-1 receptor antagonists, respectively. Results:Morphine infusion (40.0 mg · kg−1 · 24 h−1) reduced baseline withdrawal latencies by 45–55% in B6 mice of both sexes, indicating hyperalgesia; this increased nociception was manifest in male e/e mice only. Although MK-801 reversed hyperalgesia in male mice only, increasing latencies by 72%, MSG606 increased latencies by approximately 60% exclusively in females. A lower morphine infusion dose (1.6 mg · kg−1 · 24 h−1) reduced baseline withdrawal latencies by 45–52% in B6 and e/e mice of both sexes, which was reversed by MK-801, but not MSG606, in both male and female B6 mice. Conclusions:The data indicate the sex-specific mediation of high-dose morphine-induced hyperalgesia by N-methyl-d-aspartate and melanocortin-1 receptors in male and female mice, respectively, suggesting a broader relevance of this known sexual dimorphism. The data further indicate that the neural substrates contributing to hyperalgesia are morphine dose-dependent.


Neuroscience Letters | 2009

Acute and chronic fentanyl administration causes hyperalgesia independently of opioid receptor activity in mice.

Amanda R. Waxman; Caroline Arout; Megan Caldwell; Albert Dahan; Benjamin Kest

Although mu-receptor opioids are clinically important analgesics, they can also paradoxically cause hyperalgesia independently of opioid receptor activity, presumably via the action of neuroexcitatory glucoronide metabolites. However, it is unknown whether the commonly used mu-receptor opioid analgesic fentanyl, which is not subject to glucuronidation, can also induce hyperalgesia independently of opioid receptor activity. Thus, here we examined whether fentanyl increases nociception on the tail-withdrawal test in CD-1 mice concurrently treated with the opioid receptor antagonist naltrexone or in opioid receptor triple knock-out mice lacking mu, delta, and kappa opioid receptors. For both groups, an acute fentanyl bolus dose (0.25mg/kg, s.c.) and continuous fentanyl infusion (cumulative daily dose: 10mg/kg) did not cause analgesia at any time. Instead, fentanyl significantly decreased withdrawal latencies relative to pre-drug values for the next 15-60 min and for six days, respectively. MK-801 blocked and reversed hyperalgesia caused by the acute injection and continuous infusion of fentanyl, respectively, in naltrexone-treated CD-1 mice, indicating the contribution of NMDA receptors to fentanyl hyperalgesia. These data show that the synthetic opioid fentanyl causes hyperalgesia independently of prior or concurrent opioid receptor activity or analgesia. Since the biotransformation of fentanyl does not yield any known pronociceptive metabolites, these data challenge assumptions regarding the role of neuroexcitatory metabolites in opioid-induced hyperalgesia.


Journal for Specialists in Pediatric Nursing | 2011

Illness‐specific anxiety: Implications for functioning and utilization of medical services in adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease

Laura C. Reigada; Jean-Marie Bruzzese; Keith J. Benkov; Joseph Levy; Amanda R. Waxman; Eva Petkova; Carrie Masia Warner

PURPOSE. Adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) may be at heightened risk for developing anxiety and depression. This cross-sectional pilot study examined the relationship between anxiety and depression and health-related behaviors. METHODS. Thirty-six adolescents with diagnosed IBD, ages 12-17, and their parents were recruited from two pediatric gastroenterology medical centers. RESULTS. Clinical levels of anxiety (22%) and depressive symptoms (30%) were reported by patients. Regression analyses revealed that IBD-specific anxiety was significantly associated with greater utilization of medical services and worsened psychosocial functioning. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS. Results provide preliminary support that IBD-specific anxiety may play an important role in disease management, yet concerns are rarely systematically assessed by health professionals.


Anesthesiology | 2009

Morphine-6β-glucuronide Rapidly Increases Pain Sensitivity Independently of Opioid Receptor Activity in Mice and Humans

Eveline van Dorp; Benjamin Kest; William J. Kowalczyk; Aurora Morariu; Amanda R. Waxman; Caroline Arout; Albert Dahan; Elise Sarton

Background:Previous data indicate that morphine-6&bgr;-glucuronide (M6G), a morphine metabolite with analgesic properties, can paradoxically increase pain sensitivity in mice and humans. The authors tested mice and humans for M6G hyperalgesia and assessed the contribution of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor activity in mice. Methods:Nociception after acute injection (10 mg/kg) and chronic infusion (1.6 mg/kg per 24 h) of M6G or saline was assayed using the tail-withdrawal test in CD-1 mice implanted with pellets containing the opioid antagonist naltrexone or placebo and in knockout mice lacking &mgr;-, &kgr;-, and &dgr;-opioid receptors and their B6129F1 controls. In volunteers, responses to heat pain were tested after a M6G (0.4 mg/kg) injection in the presence of a continuous high naloxone (0.04-mg/kg bolus followed by 0.04 mg/kg per hour) or saline background infusion. Results:Acute M6G injection evoked analgesia in CD-1 mice implanted with placebo pellets and B6129F1 control mice, whereas it caused hyperalgesia in CD-1 mice treated concurrently with naltrexone and in knockout mice. Continuous M6G infusion produced hyperalgesia within 24 h, lasting for a minimum of 6 days, in both placebo- and naltrexone-pelleted mice. The N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist MK-801 (0.05 mg/kg) blocked and reversed hyperalgesia after the acute injection and continuous infusion of M6G, respectively. In humans, M6G increased heat pain sensitivity for at least 6 h independently of simultaneous naloxone infusion. Conclusions:These data indicate that M6G causes hyperalgesia independent of previous or concurrent opioid receptor activity or analgesia. In mice, a causal role for the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor is also indicated.


Neuropsychological Rehabilitation | 2012

Effect of type of cue, type of response, time delay and two different ongoing tasks on prospective memory functioning after acquired brain injury

Sarah A. Raskin; Carol A. Buckheit; Amanda R. Waxman

Failures of prospective memory (PM) are one of the most frequent, and least studied, sequelae of brain injury. PM, also referred to as memory for intentions, is the ability to remember to carry out a future task. Successful completion of a PM task requires the ability to monitor time, keep the action to be performed periodically in awareness, remember the task to be performed, and initiate the action. Although PM has been shown to be a common difficulty after brain injury, it remains unknown which aspects of performance are impaired. In this study, the performance of 25 individuals with brain injury and that of 25 healthy participants were measured separately on the following variables: time until completion of the task, difficulty of the ongoing task being performed while waiting, whether the task to be performed is an action or is verbal, and whether the cue to perform the task is the passing of a particular amount of time (e.g., 10 minutes) or is an external cue (e.g., an alarm sounding). Individuals with brain injury demonstrated impairment compared to healthy adults on virtually all variables. PM performance was also compared to a battery of standard neuropsychological measures of attention, memory, and executive functions, and to self-report measures of PM functioning, in order to determine the underlying cognitive deficits responsible for poor PM performance, if any. PM performance was correlated with measures of executive functioning but not to self-report measures of PM functioning. Implications are discussed in terms of cognitive rehabilitation recommendations.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2008

Acute and chronic heroin dependence in mice: Contribution of opioid and excitatory amino acid receptors

Gad Klein; Aaron Juni; Caroline A. Arout; Amanda R. Waxman; Charles E. Inturrisi; Benjamin Kest

Opioid and excitatory amino acid receptors contribute to morphine dependence, but there are no studies of their role in heroin dependence. Thus, mice injected with acute or chronic heroin doses in the present study were pretreated with one of the following selective antagonists: 7-benzylidenenaltrexone (BNTX), naltriben (NTB), nor-binaltorphimine (nor-BNI; delta1, delta2, and kappa opioid receptors, respectively), MK-801, or LY293558 (NMDA and AMPA excitatory amino acid receptors, respectively). Naloxone-precipitated withdrawal jumping frequency, shown here to be a reliable index of heroin dependence magnitude, was reduced by BNTX or NTB in mice injected with both acute and chronic heroin doses. In contrast, nor-BNI did not alter jumping frequencies in mice injected with an acute heroin dose but significantly increased them in mice receiving chronic heroin injections. Continuous MK-801 or LY293558 infusion, but not injection, reduced jumping frequencies during withdrawal from acute heroin treatment. Their delivery by injection was nonetheless effective against chronic heroin dependence, suggesting mechanisms not simply attributable to NMDA or AMPA blockade. These data indicate that whereas delta1, delta2, NMDA, and AMPA receptors enable acute and chronic heroin dependence, kappa receptor activity limits the dependence liability of chronic heroin. With the exception of delta1 receptors, the apparent role of these receptors to heroin dependence is consistent with their contribution to morphine dependence, indicating that there is substantial physiological commonality underlying dependence to both heroin and morphine. The ability of kappa receptor blockade to differentially alter acute and chronic dependence supports previous assertions from studies with other opioids that acute and chronic opioid dependence are, at least in part, mechanistically distinct. Elucidating the substrates contributing to heroin dependence, and identifying their similarities and differences with those of other opioids such as morphine, may yield effective treatment strategies to the problem of heroin dependency.


Physiology & Behavior | 2010

Progesterone rapidly recruits female-typical opioid-induced hyperalgesic mechanisms

Amanda R. Waxman; Aaron Juni; William J. Kowalczyk; Caroline Arout; Wendy F. Sternberg; Benjamin Kest

Continuous morphine treatment can paradoxically increase nociception (i.e. hyperalgesia) in male and female mice, but sex differences have been reported. Here, we studied progesterone modulation of these differences by assessing nociception on the tail-withdrawal test in male and female mice rendered hyperalgesic during continuous infusion of two different morphine doses (1.6 and 40.0mg/kg/24h). Although the lower morphine infusion dose increased nociception in both sexes by infusion Day 4, this hyperalgesia dissipated by Day 6 in males and ovariectomized females, but not gonadally intact females. A single subcutaneous progesterone (0.0016mg/kg) injection to males and ovariectomized females on Day 6 caused hyperalgesia to recur within 30min and to persist for a minimum of 120min. The larger morphine infusion dose also increased nociception in both sexes on Days 4 and 6. However, the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 (0.05mg/kg) reversed hyperalgesia in males and ovariectomized females but not gonadally intact females on infusion Day 6. Subcutaneous progesterone (0.0016mg/kg) injection inhibited this reversal in male and ovariectomized female mice but had no effect on nociception in saline-infused mice of either sex. These data confirm our previous findings that male and female mice utilize distinct hyperalgesic mechanisms, and show for the first time that a single progesterone bolus dose can recruit female-typical hyperalgesia in ovariectomized females and males.


Neuroscience Letters | 2009

The contribution of MOR-1 exons 1–4 to morphine and heroin analgesia and dependence

Gad Klein; Grace C. Rossi; Amanda R. Waxman; Carolne Arout; Aaron Juni; Charles E. Inturrisi; Benjamin Kest

Although morphine and heroin analgesia is mediated by mu-opioid receptors encoded by the MOR-1 gene, distinct isoforms are involved. Both opioids also induce dependence by acting at mu-opioid receptors, but which variants are utilized is not known. Here, we assayed morphine and heroin analgesia and dependence in mice treated with antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (AO) targeting MOR-1 exons 1-4. Whereas AOs targeting exons 1 and 4 blocked morphine analgesia, those targeting exons 2 and 3 blocked heroin analgesia. Neither morphine nor heroin analgesia was compromised 5 days after the last AO injection. In morphine and heroin dependent mice, only exon 1 AO significantly reduced jumping incidence during naloxone (50mg/kg) precipitated withdrawal. Neither analgesia nor withdrawal jumping was attenuated in controls pretreated with saline or a mismatch oligodeoxynucleotide control sequence. While these data confirm previous reports that morphine and heroin analgesia are not mediated by a single mu-opioid receptor, both opiates nonetheless apparently induce dependence via a mu-opioid receptor isoform containing exon 1. For heroin, the possibility that analgesia and dependence are mediated by distinct mu-opioid receptor isoforms offers the prospect of developing potent opiate analgesics possessing reduced dependence liability.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Differential Expressions of the Alternatively Spliced Variant mRNAs of the µ Opioid Receptor Gene, OPRM1, in Brain Regions of Four Inbred Mouse Strains

Jin Xu; Zhigang Lu; Mingming Xu; Grace C. Rossi; Benjamin Kest; Amanda R. Waxman; Gavril W. Pasternak; Ying-Xian Pan

The µ opioid receptor gene, OPRM1, undergoes extensive alternative pre-mRNA splicing in rodents and humans, with dozens of alternatively spliced variants of the OPRM1 gene. The present studies establish a SYBR green quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay to more accurately quantify mouse OPRM1 splice variant mRNAs. Using these qPCR assays, we examined the expression of OPRM1 splice variant mRNAs in selected brain regions of four inbred mouse strains displaying differences in µ opioid-induced tolerance and physical dependence: C56BL/6J, 129P3/J, SJL/J and SWR/J. The complete mRNA expression profiles of the OPRM1 splice variants reveal marked differences of the variant mRNA expression among the brain regions in each mouse strain, suggesting region-specific alternative splicing of the OPRM1 gene. The expression of many variants was also strain-specific, implying a genetic influence on OPRM1 alternative splicing. The expression levels of a number of the variant mRNAs in certain brain regions appear to correlate with strain sensitivities to morphine analgesia, tolerance and physical dependence in four mouse strains.

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Benjamin Kest

College of Staten Island

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Caroline Arout

City University of New York

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Albert Dahan

Leiden University Medical Center

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William J. Kowalczyk

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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