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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We attempted to develop an experimental animal model using rat's tail for understanding the mechanisms involving peripheral neuropathic
pain
. Under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia, the left inferior caudal trunk of the rat was resected between the S3 and S4 spinal nerves. Latencies of tail-flick induced by the stimulus such as warm (40 degrees C) and cold (4 degrees C) water to the tail were measured for the following 30 weeks. In addition, sensitivity of the tail to mechanical stimulation was tested with von
Frey
hairs on these rats. Operated rats showed abnormal sensitivity of the tail to normally innocuous mechanical and thermal (warm and cold) stimuli. We interpreted these results as signs of neuropathic
pain
following nerve injury. The present model offers several advantages in performing behavioral tests; (1) it is easy to apply thermal stimulation to the rat's tail using a water bottle; (2) it is easy to apply the mechanical stimulation with von
Frey
hairs and to localize sensitive areas in the tail; and (3) blind behavioral studies are possible due to the lack of deformity in the tail after surgery.
...
PMID:A behavioral model for peripheral neuropathy produced in rat's tail by inferior caudal trunk injury. 782 81
In this study we examined the effect of partial sciatic nerve ligation (PSNL) on the receptive field size, the baseline firing rate (BFR) and the response of spinal dorsal horn (DH) neurons to mechanical stimulation. In addition, we tested the effect of adenosine agonist, 5'-N-ethylcarboxamide-adenosine (NECA), and the adenosine antagonist caffeine on these parameters. Adult male Sprague-Dawley animals were used. One-third to one-half of the right sciatic nerve was tightly ligated. Unanesthetized animals were tested for their response to mechanical stimulation using Von
Frey
filaments and a blunt probe. The mean force that produced a paw withdrawal response in the operated animals was significantly less than the force that produced withdrawal in unoperated animals (median: 103.5 vs. 259.7; P < 0.001 for the paw ipsilateral to the ligation). Extracellular recordings were made from nociceptive-specific DH neurons located in laminal I-V of chloral hydrate-anesthetized rats. Recordings were made from 38 neurons in the right and 29 cells in the left DH of unoperated and 40 cells in right and 41 cell in the left DH of operated animals. The BFRs of neurons recorded in the operated animals were not significantly different from those recorded in normal animals. The mean receptive field size (RFS) of neurons (both ipsilateral and contralateral to the ligation) in the operated animals was significantly larger than the RFS of unoperated animals (right side: 180 +/- 2.8 mm2 compared to 66 +/- 2.3 mm2; left side: 93 +/- 31 compared to 65 +/- 21). Twenty-four percent of all neurons in the operated group had bilateral receptive fields; in contrast, only 3% of the neurons in the control animals showed bilateral receptive fields. To examine the effects of adenosine agonist and antagonist, NECA and caffeine were applied next to the recording electrode.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pain
1994 Sep
PMID:Partial sciatic nerve ligation results in an enlargement of the receptive field and enhancement of the response of dorsal horn neurons to noxious stimulation by an adenosine agonist. 783 92
The abnormal
pain
sensations that accompany peripheral neuropathies are sometimes found in a distribution that does not coincide with the territories of nerves or posterior roots. This 'extra-territorial'
pain
is one of the lines of evidence that has been advanced to support the proposal that these patients suffer from a psychogenic disorder. In the present experiments, rats were prepared with a unilateral chronic constriction injury (CCI) to the sciatic nerve. Beginning on the first postoperative day and continuing for at least 18 days, exaggerated withdrawal reflexes to pinprick stimulation, indicative of mechano-hyperalgesia, were seen on the side of nerve injury in the hindpaw territories of both the injured sciatic nerve and the uninjured saphenous nerve. Beginning on postoperative day 4 and continuing for at least the next 3 weeks, the withdrawal responses to von
Frey
hair stimulation on the nerve-injured side occurred at a significantly lower threshold, indicating the presence of mechano-allodynia. The severity and time course of the mechano-allodynia were similar in both nerve territories. When tested 18 days after the CCI, mechano-allodynia in the saphenous territory was abolished by an acute saphenous transection, but unaffected by sciatic transection. Conversely, mechano-allodynia evoked from the mid-plantar sciatic territory was abolished by acute sciatic transection, but unaffected by saphenous transection. These results show that rats with an experimental painful peripheral mononeuropathy have extra-territorial
pain
like that seen in man. Extra-territorial
pain
may be partly or entirely due to a peripheral nerve injury-evoked dysfunction of
pain
processing neurons in the central nervous system.
Pain
1994 Jun
PMID:Extra-territorial pain in rats with a peripheral mononeuropathy: mechano-hyperalgesia and mechano-allodynia in the territory of an uninjured nerve. 793 15
We applied and validated a quantitative allodynia assessment technique, using a recently developed rat surgical neuropathy model wherein nocifensive behaviors are evoked by light touch to the paw. Employing von
Frey
hairs from 0.41 to 15.1 g, we first characterized the percent response at each stimulus intensity. A smooth log-linear relationship was observed, with a median 50% threshold at 1.97 g (95% confidence limits, 1.12-3.57 g). Subsequently, we applied a paradigm using stimulus oscillation around the response threshold, which allowed more rapid, efficient measurements. Median 50% threshold by this up-down method was 2.4 g (1.81-2.76). Correlation coefficient between the two methods was 0.91. In neuropathic rats, good intra- and inter-observer reproducibility was found for the up-down paradigm; some variability was seen in normal rats, attributable to extensive testing. Thresholds in a sizable group of neuropathic rats showed insignificant variability over 20 days. After 50 days, 61% still met strict neuropathy criteria, using survival analysis. Threshold measurement using the up-down paradigm, in combination with the neuropathic
pain
model, represents a powerful tool for analyzing the effects of manipulations of the neuropathic
pain
state.
...
PMID:Quantitative assessment of tactile allodynia in the rat paw. 799 May 13
A goal of the present study was to document the behavioral changes observed in a model of painful neuropathy in the primate (Macaca fascicularis). A neuropathic state was induced by tight ligation of the L7 spinal nerve, just distal to the L7 dorsal root ganglion. Sensory testing was done on the ventral surface of the foot, a region that includes the L7 dermatome. Within 1 week following surgery, all monkeys (n = 3) developed a marked sensitivity to mechanical stimulation (with a camel hair brush and von
Frey
hairs), indicating the presence of mechanical allodynia. In 2 animals, the increased sensitivity to mechanical stimulation was also observed on the contralateral side. The threshold for withdrawal to a heat stimulus decreased, indicating the presence of heat hyperalgesia. Presentation of various cooling stimuli, such as acetone and cold water baths, suggested that cold allodynia had also developed. These behavioral phenomena are similar to those seen in humans diagnosed with peripheral neuropathic
pain
. The behavioral abnormalities are discussed in relation to the responses of spinothalamic tract cells recorded from primates with the same peripheral nerve injury (Palecek et al. 1992).
Pain
1994 Feb
PMID:Behavioral manifestations of an experimental model for peripheral neuropathy produced by spinal nerve ligation in the primate. 800 6
It has been argued that
pain
functions to facilitate recovery from injury and/or illness by stimulating recuperative behaviors. If this is the case, then hyperalgesia might be expected to be part of the constellation of adaptations that occur during sickness. The present series of studies tested two agents that induce illness (lithium chloride and bacterial cell-wall endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide)) to determine their acute effects on
pain
responsivity in rats. Both agents produced hyperalgesia as measured by the tail-flick and formalin tests. This enhanced responsivity appears to be specific to
pain
since (a) no enhanced response was observed to a non-painful stimulus (6 g von
Frey
hairs), and (b) the effect could not be accounted for by changes in tail skin temperature. In addition, a conditioned taste aversion paradigm was used to examine the possibility that illness-induced hyperalgesia could be conditioned to a novel taste (saccharine). This procedure was successful in producing a conditioned hyperalgesia which was comparable in magnitude and duration to acute illness induced
pain
facilitation. Taken together, this series of studies suggests that such
pain
facilitation might have adaptive functions similar to those ascribed to other illness-induced behaviors.
Pain
1994 Feb
PMID:Acute and conditioned hyperalgesic responses to illness. 800 12
Extravascular activation of thrombocytes may contribute to nociceptor excitation and
pain
, since platelets store and, upon stimulation, release potential algogenic substances such as serotonin, histamine and precursor molecules of bradykinin. To test this hypothesis, a skin-nerve preparation of rat hairy skin, in vitro, was used that allows to record and characterize single afferent nerve fibers. In a first protocol, receptive fields of nociceptive C-fibers, at the corium side of the skin patch, were exposed to adenosine diphosphate (ADP), to heparinized human platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and to PRP activated by ADP. Such activated platelets excited 9/11 units characterized as mechano-heat responsive C-nociceptors (CMH); peak discharges of more than 10 spikes/s were observed. After application of activated PRP, 4/5 high threshold mechanosensitive C-units and 4/5 mechano-cold sensitive C-units became responsive to heat stimulation but only few of these fibers were excited (1/5 in each group). In a second series of experiments the exposure to native PRP was prolonged to test for the effect of spontaneous platelet activation resulting from cutaneous collagen. Prolonged exposure did, but not significantly, enhance fiber discharge. During subsequent exposure to activated PRP, the discharge commenced, on average, after a significant delay of about three minutes. With this protocol 5/7 CMH units were driven by activated platelets. Following both protocols, mechanical (v.
Frey
) and thermal thresholds of the CMH units were not significantly altered. The findings demonstrate that nociceptors can indeed be driven and sensitized by activated platelets. This
pain
inducing mechanism may be relevant to certain clinical conditions, and it appears promising to scrutinize the chemical factors involved.
...
PMID:Activated human platelets in plasma excite nociceptors in rat skin, in vitro. 804 82
An experimental mononeuropathy was produced in rats by unilateral loose ligation of the sciatic nerve, with a contralateral sham surgery. Repeated bilateral sensory testing was performed over time to investigate any threshold differences between the loose ligature side and the contralateral control side. A prolonged reduction in the mean withdrawal threshold to heat was observed on the loose ligature side over the medial dorsum of the hindpaw (MDH), and over the plantar surface of the hindpaw (PSH). Following loose ligature there was also a significant reduction in the von
Frey
fiber withdrawal thresholds over the lateral dorsum of the hindpaw (LDH) and the medial dorsum of the hindpaw (MDH). In a second experiment the saphenous nerves were transected bilaterally in rats who had an earlier unilateral loose sciatic ligation. The heat hyperalgesia that had been previously observed over the MDH was abolished, and no withdrawal response could be elicited with the largest von
Frey
fiber over the MDH, indicating that the MDH hyperalgesia induced by sciatic loose ligature was mediated by the saphenous nerve. This adjacent neuropathic hyperalgesia (ANH) resembles the saphenous mediated ANH observed over the MDH following sciatic transection, follows the same temporal course of onset, and may share a similar pathogenesis. The heat threshold over the PSH and the pressure threshold over the LDH were unaffected by the bilateral saphenous transection, demonstrating that following loose sciatic ligation both of these thresholds are mediated by the sciatic nerve.
Pain
1993 Dec
PMID:A loose ligature-induced mononeuropathy produces hyperalgesias mediated by both the injured sciatic nerve and the adjacent saphenous nerve. 812 90
Frey's syndrome
is distinguished by the appearing of erythema, sensation of hotness, sometimes
pain
, and transpiration discharge in the preauricular and temporal area when ingestion stars. We present an eleven month old child with this pathology and we review the etiology and clinic manifestations of this syndrome.
...
PMID:[Frey syndrome in childhood]. 812 75
The threshold of a cutaneous withdrawal reflex, elicited by calibrated von
Frey
hairs applied to the foot and leg, has been used to study the development of spinal sensory processing in a group of 50 preterm and full-term infants ranging from 27.5 to 42.5 weeks postconceptional age (PCA). Data sets (108) were collected on initial threshold, the effects of repeated innocuous stimuli, the receptive field of the withdrawal reflex, and the effect of a contralateral stimulus. As reported previously (Fitzgerald et al. 1988, 1989), there was a correlation between PCA and initial threshold. The mean threshold at 29 weeks was 0.237 g (S.E.M. 0.042), whereas the mean threshold at 41 weeks was 0.980 g (S.E.M. 0.134). Repeated stimulation with von
Frey
hairs led to a significant lowering of threshold or "sensitization" of the reflex in infants of up to 35 weeks PCA. Thereafter, the decrease in threshold was not significant, and habituation was observed. From 27.5 weeks PCA, it was possible to elicit the withdrawal reflex from the whole limb as far up as the top of the thigh and buttock. Below 30 weeks PCA, the thresholds within this receptive field were uniform, but after 30 weeks a gradient of thresholds was observed increasing progressively from the sole of the foot towards the knee. The application of a maintained stimulus to the contralateral limb significantly inhibited withdrawal reflex responses to ipsilateral von
Frey
hair stimulation, across all age bands. These results illustrate postnatal changes in sensory processing within the human spinal cord.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pain
1994 Jan
PMID:The cutaneous withdrawal reflex in human neonates: sensitization, receptive fields, and the effects of contralateral stimulation. 815 46
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