• Eur J Pain · Jun 2004

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Mechanically induced axon reflex and hyperalgesia in human UV-B burn are reduced by systemic lidocaine.

    • Wolfgang Koppert, Valeska Brueckl, Christian Weidner, and Martin Schmelz.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, University of Erlangen, Germany.
    • Eur J Pain. 2004 Jun 1;8(3):237-44.

    AbstractThe mechanisms for the induction of primary mechanical hyperalgesia are unclear. We analyzed the neurogenic axon reflex erythema (flare) following phasic mechanical stimulation in normal and in UV-B irradiated skin. In a cross-over double blind design (n = 10), low dose of systemic lidocaine suppressed mechanical hyperalgesia in sunburned skin and in the mechanically induced flare. Phasic mechanical stimulation, even at painful intensities, did not evoke a flare reaction in normal skin. However, stimulation within the UV-B burn dose-dependently provoked an immediate flare reaction. Systemic lidocaine suppressed the mechanically induced flare as well as the mechanical hyperalgesia in sunburned skin, while leaving the impact-induced ratings in normal skin unchanged. Systemic lidocaine reduced these effects of sensitization, but did not reduce ratings in normal skin. As mechanically insensitive ("sleeping") nociceptors have been shown to mediate the axon-reflex in human skin, sensitization of this class of nociceptors might contribute also to the UV-B-induced primary mechanical hyperalgesia.

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