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Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2021
Development of a common peroneal nerve injury model in domestic swine for the study of translational neuropathic pain treatments.
- Abigail Hellman, Teresa Maietta, Alicia Clum, Kanakaharini Byraju, Nataly Raviv, Michael D Staudt, Erin Jeannotte, Julia Nalwalk, Sophie Belin, Yannick Poitelon, and Julie G Pilitsis.
- 2Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics, and.
- J. Neurosurg. 2021 Nov 1; 135 (5): 151615231516-1523.
ObjectiveTo date, muscular and bone pain have been studied in domestic swine models, but the only neuropathic pain model described in swine is a mixed neuritis model. Common peroneal nerve injury (CPNI) neuropathic pain models have been utilized in both mice and rats.MethodsThe authors developed a swine surgical CPNI model of neuropathic pain. Behavioral outcomes were validated with von Frey filament testing, thermal sensitivity assessments, and social and motor scoring. Demyelination of the nerve was confirmed through standard histological assessment. The contralateral nerve served as the control.ResultsCPNI induced mechanical and thermal allodynia (p < 0.001 [n = 10] and p < 0.05 [n = 4], respectively) and increased pain behavior, i.e., guarding of the painful leg (n = 12). Myelin protein zero (P0) staining revealed demyelination of the ligated nerve upstream of the ligation site.ConclusionsIn a neuropathic pain model in domestic swine, the authors demonstrated that CPNI induces demyelination of the common peroneal nerve, which the authors hypothesize is responsible for the resulting allodynic pain behavior. As the anatomical features of domestic swine resemble those of humans more closely than previously used rat and mouse models, utilizing this swine model, which is to the authors' knowledge the first of its kind, will aid in the translation of experimental treatments to clinical trials.
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