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Neuroscience research · Sep 2006
Assessing mechanical sensitivity of masseter muscle in lightly anesthetized rats: a model for craniofacial muscle hyperalgesia.
- Jin Y Ro and Norman F Capra.
- Department of Biomedical Sciences, Program in Neuroscience, University of Maryland Baltimore, School of Dentistry, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA. jro@umaryland.edu
- Neurosci. Res. 2006 Sep 1; 56 (1): 119-23.
AbstractIn this report, we present a simple and reliable way of assessing mechanical sensitivity of masseter muscle as a model for craniofacial muscle hyperalgesia. Mechanical thresholds that evoke nocifensive hindpaw responses following noxious masseter stimulation were assessed. Masseteric injections of widely used sensitizing agents significantly increased mechanical sensitivity of the muscle in a time dependent manner without affecting other muscles and overlying skin. This lightly anesthetized rodent paradigm allows us to provide calibrated and reliable mechanical stimulus, which is not possible in behaving animals. The technique can be applied to study mechanistic bases for craniofacial muscle tenderness.
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