News Release

Scientist Fancies Frogs For Pain Research

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine

(Tulsa, Okla--) The northern grass frog has jumped onto the biomedical research field as a leading model for pain investigation. Scientist Craig W. Stevens, Ph.D., says the common grass frog, Rana pipiens, can help humans better understand how powerful drugs like morphine and codeine affect the brain.

Dr. Stevens, an associate professor of pharmacology at the Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, developed the alternative model in the early 1990's.

"It's pretty amazing to think that frogs can help us understand pain in humans," says Dr. Stevens who runs the only amphibian-model laboratory of its kind in the United States. "But our research shows there is much similarity in the actions of morphine and other opioid drugs in amphibians and mammals."

Dr. Stevens' lab is located in Tulsa, Oklahoma and houses approximately 100 frogs involved in ongoing studies. He is director of the Analgesia Research Laboratory, a biomedical group dedicated to pain research using non-mammalian models. Although it is not scientifically proven, Dr. Stevens believes that amphibians have less potential for pain than mammals. He is committed to his cause for scientific, economic and ethical reasons. "The ability to detect or quantify a conscious experience like pain in animals is not possible - to think otherwise is not science, but science fiction."

Affectionately called the "Frog Man" by his colleagues, Dr. Stevens is a career scientist with more than 15 years of experience in opioid and pain research. In 1992, he was awarded the Young Investigator Travel Award from the American Pain Society. That same year he received the FIRST Award from the National Institutes of Health.

The widely published Dr. Stevens is scheduled to speak at the 1999 AAAS Annual Meeting in Anaheim, California January 23 at 2:30 p.m. The title of his work is "An Amphibian Whole-Animal Alternative for the Study of Pain." It will be delivered during the session, "All Creatures Weird and Wonderful: Revolutionary Approaches to Medical Discovery."

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About the Speaker:
Craig W. Stevens, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Pharmacology

Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine
1111 West 17th Street
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74107-1898
Phone: 918-561-8234
Fax: 918-561-8412
Email: scraig@osu-com.okstate.edu

1988 Mayo Graduate School of Medicine, Rochester, MN; Ph.D., in Pharmacology
1984 University of Illinois, Chicago, IL; M.S. in Biological Sciences
1978 Augustana College, Rock Is., IL; B.A. in Biology, cum laude

For more information about Dr. Stevens and a copy of his curriculum vitae, check out his homepage at http://osu.com.okstate.edu/PharmPhys/cws.htm



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