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- M Ringkamp, E J Grethel, Y Choi, R A Meyer, and S N Raja.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
- Pain. 1999 Feb 1;79(2-3):135-41.
AbstractThe development of alpha-adrenergic sensitivity in cutaneous nociceptors has been postulated as a mechanism for sympathetically maintained pain (SMP). In order to characterize the adrenergic receptors involved, we investigated the effects of intraplantar administration of alpha1-(prazosin) and alpha2-(yohimbine) adrenergic antagonists and systemic injection of phentolamine, a non-specific alpha-adrenergic blocker, on allodynic/hyperalgesic behavior in an animal model thought to mimic SMP in humans. Peripheral neuropathy in rats was induced by tight ligation of the L5/L6 spinal nerves. Mechanical hyperalgesia was quantified with von Frey hairs applied either for 3 s or repetitively to the plantar surface of the hindpaw. Responses to the 3 s duration stimulus were used to determine the paw withdrawal threshold with the up-down paradigm and repetitive stimuli were used to determine the response incidence of paw withdrawal to a given von Frey hair. Mechanical thresholds on the ipsilateral paw decreased significantly after ligation and were stable over the following 3 weeks. Intradermal administration of yohimbine or prazosin did not significantly alleviate mechanical hyperalgesia in L5/L6 ligated animals. Also systemic administration of phentolamine (1 and 5 mg/kg) did not alleviate the increased incidence of paw withdrawal in L5/L6 spinal nerve ligated animals. These results suggest that an alpha adrenergic interaction between sympathetic efferent and somatic afferent fibers does not play a critical role for the maintenance of mechanical hyperalgesia in this model for neuropathic pain.
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