Abstract
Background: The lack of a satisfactory strategy for postoperative pain management significantly impairs the quality of life for many patients. However, existing nanoplatforms cannot provide a longer duration of nerve blockage with intensity-adjustable characteristics under imaging guidance for clinical applications. Results: To overcome this challenge, we proposed a biocompatible nanoplatform that enables high-definition ultrasound imaging-guided, intensity-adjustable, and long-lasting analgesia in a postoperative pain management model in awake mice. The nanoplatform was constructed by incorporating perfluoropentane and levobupivacaine with red blood cell membranes decorated liposomes. The fabricated nanoplatform can achieve gas-producing and can finely escape from immune surveillance in vivo to maximize the anesthetic effect. The analgesia effect was assessed from both motor reactions and pain-related histological markers. The findings demonstrated that the duration of intensity-adjustable analgesia in our platform is more than 20 times longer than free levobupivacaine injection with pain relief for around 3 days straight. Moreover, the pain relief was strengthened by repeatable ultrasound irradiation to effectively manage postoperative pain in an intensity-adjustable manner. No apparent systemic and local tissue injury was detected under different treatments. Conclusion: Our results suggest that nanoplatform can provide an effective strategy for ultrasound imaging-guided intensity-adjustable pain management with prolonged analgesia duration and show considerable transformation prospects.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Qiao, B., Song, X., Zhang, W., Xu, M., Zhuang, B., Li, W., … Zhang, C. (2022). Intensity-adjustable pain management with prolonged duration based on phase-transitional nanoparticles-assisted ultrasound imaging-guided nerve blockade. Journal of Nanobiotechnology, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12951-022-01707-z
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.