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- Raul Sanoja and Fernando Cervero.
- Anesthesia Research Unit Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Dentistry and McGill Center for Pain Research, McGill University, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
- Pain. 2005 Nov 1; 118 (1-2): 243-53.
AbstractSome abdominal pain syndromes are characterized by persistent pain without demonstrable pathology. Many of them are prevalent in women and it is known that sex hormones are associated with differences in pain perception between males and females. To model a process of functional abdominal pain in females we studied the time course and estrogen dependency of a hyperalgesic state induced by ovariectomy in adult mice. Three groups of C57/BL6 mice were used: virgin mice, proven breeders (2 or 3 successful pregnancies) and retired breeders (more than three successful pregnancies). Within each group, a third of the mice were ovariectomized (OVX), a third received sham surgery and a third were controls. OVX mice, but not sham or controls, developed a robust mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia in the abdomen, hindlimbs and proximal tail, but not in the forelimbs, that was established 4 weeks after OVX and lasted for the 7 weeks of the experiment. Increases in visceral sensitivity were also observed in OVX mice. Thermal pain thresholds (hot plate) remained unchanged. The reproductive history of the animals had no influence on the hyperalgesia. In another series of experiments a slow release pellet containing 17beta-estradiol was implanted in half of the OVX mice and a similar pellet without the hormone in the other half. Hormone replacement prevented the development of hyperalgesia in OVX animals but did not stop the involution of the internal reproductive organs. We conclude that OVX in mice provides a useful model for a hormonally dependent hyperalgesic state resembling functional pain.
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