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Sea snail saliva may become new treatment for most severe pain

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Sea snail saliva may become new treatment for most severe pain

Chemical and Engineering News

July 26, 2010 Volume 88, Number 30 pp. 39 - 40

Scientists have developed a new version of a medication, first isolated from the

saliva of sea snails, that could be taken in pill form to relieve the most

severe forms of pain as effectively as morphine but without risking addiction.

An article on the topic appears in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering

News (C & EN), ACS' weekly newsmagazine.

C & EN Senior Editor Bethany Halford notes that a sea snails' saliva contains

chemicals that help the slow-moving creatures catch prey. They include chemicals

that the snails inject into passing prey with hypodermic-needle-like teeth that

shoot from their mouths like harpoons. Scientists already have transformed one

of these chemicals into a pain-reliever for humans, but it has to be injected

directly into the spinal cord, limiting its use.

Now scientists in Australia have developed a form of the painkiller that can be

given by mouth. It relieves severe pain, such as that in people with peripheral

neuropathy, at a much lower dose than existing medications and without the risk

of causing addiction. The article quotes one expert as speculating that such a

drug could revolutionize the treatment of the most severe forms of pain.

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