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Analgesic properties of the tetrahydrocannabinols, their metabolites, and analogs
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1975
Year
Hot-plate TestMolecular PainPharmacotherapyCannabinoid PharmacologySc AdministrationMedicinal ChemistryAnalgesic PropertiesPharmacological StudyModerate Analgesic ActivityCannabinoidsCannabis UsePsychoactive DrugBiochemistryPharmacologyFunctional SelectivityNatural SciencesPhysiologyMedicineDrug Discovery
The tetrahydrocannabinols from marihuana were found to have moderate analgesic activity in mice by the hot-plate test (sc administration). Of the several metabolites of these two compounds tested, only the 11-hydroxy derivatives were more potent than the parent compounds. Analogs 1 and 2 (9-demethyl relatives which cannot be metabolized to 11-hydroxy compounds), both of which produce a pharmacological profile generally similar to that of delta8- and delta9-THC, were analgesically inert. This suggests that metabolism to 11-hydroxy congeners may be necessary for the mediation of analgesic activity in the mouse hot-plate test but not for other pharmacologic effects produced by these substances which we have examined.