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Neuroscience letters · Jan 2010
Synaptic plasticity in the substantia gelatinosa in a model of chronic neuropathic pain.
- Robby J P Jaken, Elbert A J Joosten, Martin Knüwer, Rianne Miller, Inge van der Meulen, Marco A E Marcus, and Ronald Deumens.
- Pain Management and Research Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Institute of Brain and Behavior, Maastricht University/Academic Hospital Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands. r.jaken@np.unimaas.nl
- Neurosci. Lett. 2010 Jan 18;469(1):30-3.
AbstractChronic neuropathic pain (CNP) is common after peripheral nerve injuries (PNI), but is rather refractory to available anti-pain medication. Advances in neuropathic pain research have identified cellular and molecular cues triggering the onset of neuropathic pain, but the mechanisms responsible for maintenance of chronic pain states are largely unknown. Structural changes such as sprouting of injured A-fibres into the substantia gelatinosa of the dorsal horn in the spinal cord have been proposed to relate to neuropathic pain in partial PNI models. Structural changes in central pain networks may also underlie the more persistent CNP following complete sectioning of a peripheral nerve, because this type of injury results in continuous and spontaneous afferent input to the spinal cord, which can trigger central sensitization. In the present study, the left sciatic nerve was completely sectioned and a 1-cm segment was removed to maintain a chronic pathology, whereas the right sciatic nerve was left intact. Mechanical allodynia was measured up to 84 days after injury, after which synaptic changes were studied in the lumbar substantia gelatinosa. The numbers of larger sized synaptophysin-immunoreactive presynaptic boutons were found to be increased in the substantia gelatinosa ipsilateral to the nerve injury. From these data we conclude that structural synaptic changes within the substantia gelatinosa are present months after complete nerve injury and that this plasticity may be involved in maintaining neuropathic pain states.(c) 2009 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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