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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bilateral microinjection of muscimol (60 ng), a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) agonist, into the central region of the substantia nigra (pars reticulata) produced
self-injurious behavior
(SIB), stereotyped behavior and analgesic-like effects in rats. Bilateral electrolytic lesions of the midbrain reticular formation ventrolateral to the periaqueductal gray matter completely blocked the SIB but had little effect on stereotyped behavior produced by intranigral muscimol. Lesions of the midbrain reticular formation reduced the antinociceptive effect of intranigral muscimol on the tail-flick but not on the hot-plate test. Bilateral microinjection of muscimol (10-100 ng) into the midbrain reticular formation produced intense stereotyped behavior and had an analgesic-like effect on the hot-plate test but not on the tail-flick test. Stereotyped behavior appeared to interfere with the paw-lick response on the hot-plate test. These data suggest that the antinociceptive effect of intranigral muscimol on the tail-flick test is mediated by fibers that project to or pass through the midbrain reticular formation and that
analgesia
may play an important role in muscimol-induced SIB. The midbrain reticular formation does not appear to be involved in the stereotyped behavior produced by intranigral muscimol.
...
PMID:Involvement of the midbrain reticular formation in self-injurious behavior, stereotyped behavior, and analgesia induced by intranigral microinjection of muscimol. 300 34
Self-injurious behavior
(SIB) is a serious problem among the mentally handicapped and is often accompanied by other repetitive or stereotyped behaviors. Acute administration of high doses of amphetamine or pemoline to rats produces transient SIB which is accompanied by severe deterioration of the behavioral repertoire. Repeated subcutaneous (SC) administration of pemoline to rats produces a high incidence of SIB without the dramatic behavioral changes produced by high doses of oral pemoline. Repeated pemoline increased locomotions and rears and produced intermittent stereotyped sniffing and licking/biting. However, the animals were still able to eat, drink, sleep and groom. Hotplate tests provided no evidence for
analgesia
. Because SIB is often associated with human developmental disorders, the effects of repeated SC administration of pemoline to weanling rats was also investigated. SC injections every 12 hours produced a high rate of SIB in weanling rats.
...
PMID:Repeated pemoline produces self-injurious behavior in adult and weanling rats. 378 67
Signal detection theory measures of thermal responsivity were examined to determine whether differences in reported pain experienced during
self-injurious behavior
in female patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) are explained by neurosensory factors and/or attitudinal factors (response bias). Female patients with BPD who do not experience pain during self-injury (BPD-NP group) were found to discriminate more poorly between noxious thermal stimuli of similar intensity, low P(A), than female patients with BPD who experience pain during self-injury (BPD-P group), female patients with BPD who do not have a history of self-injury (BPD-C group), and age-matched normal women. The BPD-NP group also had a higher response criterion, B (more stoical) than the BPD-C group. These findings suggest that '
analgesia
' during self-injury in patients with BPD is related to both neurosensory and attitudinal/psychological abnormalities.
...
PMID:Pain assessment in self-injurious patients with borderline personality disorder using signal detection theory. 921 79
Autism can be considered as an early general developmental disorder, characterized by problems of social interaction, problems of verbal and non verbal communication, and behavioral or ideational stereotypes. However, within autism we observe a clinical heterogeneity of autistic disorders which suggests the possibility of autistic subtypes. Several authors hypothesize an
analgesia
among autistic children; this
analgesia
may be related to self-mutilation found among autistics. The current research had two objectives: 1) to develop and validate evaluation tools for measuring aggression directed towards the self (Yale-Paris
Self-Injurious Behavior
Scale: YAPA SIB) and pain reactivity (Pre-Linguistic Behavioral Pain Reactivity Scale: PLBPRS); instruments appropriate for autistics and capable of showing different behavioral sub-types; 2) to study in 80 autistic children pain reactivity,
self-injurious behavior
, and their relation in different observational situations. The results show that the scales of
self-injurious behavior
and pain reactivity have good discriminative capacity, good test-retest reliability, and good validity. The results suggest additionally that the apparent decreased pain reactivity observed in autistics does not derive from a real
analgesia
but from a different mode of pain expression related to difficulties with verbal communication, body representation and certain cognitive disorders (learning disorders, problems representing sensations and emotions, problems establishing cause-effect relationships). Additionally, there is a significant relationship between certain self-injurious behaviors and the apparent reduced pain reactivity. Interpretations of this result are presented and the possible role of stress in autism is discussed.
...
PMID:[Study of the relationships between self-injurious behavior and pain reactivity in infantile autism]. 1037 Aug 85
Morning and afternoon salivary substance P and cortisol levels were measured in 26 adults with chronic
self-injurious behavior
(SIB) and severe developmental disabilities and compared with matched controls without SIB. Chronic SIB was associated with an altered diurnal pattern of salivary substance P relative to matched controls, characterized primarily by lower levels of morning substance P, which were significantly correlated with overall severity of SIB. There was a trend for SIB subjects to exhibit higher levels of cortisol, which was significantly correlated with overall severity of SIB. These results support a model of altered nociception and possible stress-induced
analgesia
among individuals with developmental disability and chronic SIB.
...
PMID:Altered diurnal pattern of salivary substance P in adults with developmental disabilities and chronic self-injury. 1247 63
Frequent or severe abnormal behavior may be associated with the release of endorphins that positively reinforce the behavior with an opiate euphoria or
analgesia
. One line of research exploring this association involves the superhormone, proopiomelanocortin (POMC). The products of POMC appear to be dysregulated in some human subjects who exhibit
self-injurious behavior
(SIB). Macaque monkeys have POMC very similar to humans, and some laboratory macaques display SIB or frequent stereotypies. We investigated associations between plasma levels of three immunoreactive POMC fragments with possible opioid action and abnormal behavior ratings in macaques. In 58 adult male and female macaques (24 Macaca fascicularis and 34 Macaca nemestrina), plasma levels of intact beta-endorphin (betaE) and the N-terminal fragment (BEN) were significantly higher in animals with higher levels of abnormal behavior. The C-terminal fragment (BEC) was significantly higher in males but unrelated to ratings of abnormal behavior. Levels of ACTH, cortisol, and (betaE-ACTH)/betaE dysregulation index were unrelated to abnormal behavior. None of the POMC products differed significantly by subjects' species, age, or weight. The finding that intact beta-endorphin is positively related to abnormal behavior in two species of macaque is consistent with some previous research on human subjects and nonprimates. The positive relation of the N-terminal fragment of betaE to abnormal behavior is a new finding.
...
PMID:Beta-endorphin levels in longtailed and pigtailed macaques vary by abnormal behavior rating and sex. 1771 39