Antinociceptive action of cannabidiol on thermal sensitivity and post-operative pain in male and female rats

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“This study investigated the antinociceptive potential of cannabidiol (CBD) in male and female Wistar rats. The assessment and analysis included tail withdrawal to thermal stimulation (tail flick test) and mechanical allodynia induced by plantar incision injury (von Frey test). CBD reduced acute thermal sensitivity in uninjured animals and post-operative mechanical allodynia in males and females. In the tail flick test, CBD 30mg/kg i.p. was required to induce antinociception in males. During the proestrus phase, females did not show a statistically significant antinociceptive response to CBD treatment despite a noticeable trend. In contrast, in a separate group of rats tested during the late diestrus phase, antinociception varied with CBD dosage and time. In the post-operative pain model, CBD at 3mg/kg decreased mechanical allodynia in males. Similarly, this dose reduced allodynia in females during proestrus. However, in females during late diestrus, the lower dose of CBD (0.3mg/kg) reduced mechanical allodynia, although the latency to onset of the effect was slower (90minutes). The effectiveness of a 10-fold lower dose of CBD during the late diestrus stage in females suggests that ovarian hormones can influence the action of CBD. While CBD has potential for alleviating pain in humans, personalized dosing regimens may need to be developed to treat pain in women.”

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38048909/

“•CBD produces antinociception in male and female rats.

•CBD was effective against acute thermal and post-operative pain in both sexes.

•Females in late diestrus were sensitive to a 10-fold lower dose of CBD than in proestrus.”

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166432823005119?via%3Dihub


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