• J Pain · Dec 2016

    Dorsal root ganglionic field stimulation relieves both spontaneous and induced neuropathic pain in rats.

    • Bin Pan, Hongwei Yu, Gregory J Fischer, Jeffery M Kramer, and Quinn H Hogan.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
    • J Pain. 2016 Dec 1; 17 (12): 1349-1358.

    AbstractDorsal root ganglion (DRG) electrical stimulation (ganglionic field stimulation [GFS]) is effective in relieving clinical pain, but its mechanism is unknown. We therefore developed a rat model for GFS to test analgesic effects in the context of neuropathic pain. GFS was applied with a bipolar electrode at L4, using parameters replicating clinical use (20 Hz, 150-μs pulse width, current at 80% of motor threshold). Neuropathic pain was generated by tibial nerve injury (TNI). Pain behavior was monitored by determining the threshold for withdrawal from punctate mechanical stimuli, by identifying hyperalgesic responses to noxious mechanical stimuli, and by hypersensitivity to cold. The affective dimension of pain was measured using conditioned place preference. We found that electrode insertion caused no behavioral evidence of pain and produced no histological evidence of DRG damage. GFS reversed TNI-induced hypersensitivity to cold and mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia. Allodynia remained diminished 15 minutes after GFS. Conditioned place preference showed that GFS was not rewarding in uninjured control animals but was rewarding in animals subjected to TNI, which reveals analgesic efficacy of GFS for spontaneous pain. We conclude that GFS relieves neuropathic pain in rats. This model may provide a platform for identifying mechanisms and novel applications of GFS.Copyright © 2016 American Pain Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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