Pharmacologic Substance
local anesthetic
lo·cal an·es·thet·ic
Subclass of:
Sensory System Agents;
Anesthetics
Definitions related to local anesthetics:
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(anesthetics, local) Drugs that block nerve conduction when applied locally to nerve tissue in appropriate concentrations. They act on any part of the nervous system and on every type of nerve fiber. In contact with a nerve trunk, these anesthetics can cause both sensory and motor paralysis in the innervated area. Their action is completely reversible. (From Gilman AG, et. al., Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 8th ed) Nearly all local anesthetics act by reducing the tendency of voltage-dependent sodium channels to activate.NLM Medical Subject HeadingsU.S. National Library of Medicine, 2021
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Cocaine is a naturally occurring compound indigenous to the Andes Mountains, West Indies, and Java. It was the first anesthetic to be discovered and is the only naturally occurring local anesthetic; all others are synthetically derived.WebMD, 2019
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