In
medicine, a
muscle relaxant is a drug that causes
skeletal muscle contraction to cease. Muscle relaxants are used to facilitate
surgery, to enable
tracheal intubation and to facilitate
mechanical ventilation.
Muscles relaxants typically work by blocking the effect of acetylcholine (ACh) at the neuromuscular junction.
Substances that compete with ACh, for the receptors on a muscle cell can be either depolarising, or non-depolarising.
Depolarising muscles relaxants activate the muscle briefly, before blocking it.
Non-depolarising relaxants block the ACh receptors without activating them.
Botulinum toxin, marketed as
Botox for facial wrinkle removal, works by stopping the release of ACh from the presynaptic
neuron.