Lino Becerra1,2, Pei-Ching Chang1,
James Bishop1, Jaymin Upadhyay1, Julie Anderson1,
Gautam Pendse1, Smriti Iyengar3, Alexandre Coimbra4,
Richard Baumgartner4, Adam Schwarz3, Jeffrey Evelhoch4,
Erci Nisenbaum3, Brigitte Robertson5, Thomas Large5,
David Bleakman3, Richard Hargreaves4, David Borsook1,2
1Imaging Consortium for Drug
Development,
fMRI
studies of rodents are confounded by the use of anesthetics, especially for
the study of analgesics. Furthermore,
there are no studies comparing pharmacological brain effects in humans and
rodents of the same analgesics. In
this work, we present results of pharmacological MRI (phMRI) of an opioid
analgesic (buprenorphine) in conscious rats and compare the brain activations
with results obtained in humans. Although brain structure and function differ
between humans and rodents, some parallelism does exist and this thesis
underpins much pre-clinical research. Translational results as presented here
have the potential to bridge pre-clinical with clinical imaging studies.