Neuroscience letters
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Neuroscience letters · Apr 2012
Knockdown of the sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor S1PR1 reduces pain behaviors induced by local inflammation of the rat sensory ganglion.
Sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) is a key immune mediator regulating migration of immune cells to sites of inflammation. S1P actions are mediated by a family of five G protein-coupled receptors. Sensory neurons express many of these receptors, and in vitro S1P has excitatory effects on small-diameter sensory neurons, many mediated by the S1P receptor 1 (S1PR1). ⋯ However, when the L5 ganglion was locally inflamed, a procedure that leads to rapid and sustained mechanical hypersensitivity, S1PR1 siRNA injected animals showed significantly less hypersensitivity than animals injected with scrambled siRNA. Reduced expression of S1PR1, but not S1PR2 or S1PR3, was confirmed with qPCR methods. The results indicate that the S1PR1 receptors in sensory ganglia cells may play an important role in regulating behavioral sensitivity during inflammation.
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Neuroscience letters · Apr 2012
Evaluation of the effects of treatment with sAPPα on functional and histological outcome following controlled cortical impact injury in mice.
Treatment with sAPPα, the product of non-amyloidogenic processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) has been shown to be protective following diffuse traumatic brain injury (TBI), by improving motor outcome and reducing axonal injury. However the effects of treatment with sAPPα following a focal TBI have yet to be determined. ⋯ However the effect of treatment with sAPPα was not as dramatic as that seen previously following a diffuse injury. Nonetheless, these improvements in functional outcome were acompanied by a small but significant improvement in the amount of cortical and hippocampal at 7 days post-injury, and provide further support for the efficacy of sAPPα as a potential neuroprotective agent following TBI.
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Neuroscience letters · Apr 2012
BDNF as an effect modifier for gender effects on pain thresholds in healthy subjects.
BDNF is an important marker of neuronal plasticity. It has also been associated with pain processing. Increased BDNF levels are observed in chronic pain syndromes. ⋯ These effects were not observed when gender was analyzed alone. These finding suggests that experimental heat and pressure pain threshold is gender-related and BDNF dependent. In fact BDNF has a facilitatory effect on pain threshold in females but has an opposite effect in males; supporting the notion that BDNF is an effect modifier of the gender effects on pain threshold in healthy subjects.
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Neuroscience letters · Apr 2012
Influence of somatosensory input on corticospinal excitability during motor imagery.
Our previous studies showed that corticospinal excitability during imagery of squeezing a foam ball was enhanced by somatosensory input generated by passively holding the ball. In the present study, using the same experimental model, we investigated whether corticospinal excitability was influenced by holding the object with the hand opposite to the imagined hand. ⋯ The MEPs amplitude during motor imagery was increased, only when the holding hand and the imagined hand were on the same side. These results suggest that performance improvement and rehabilitation exercises will be more effective when somatosensory stimulation and motor imagery are done on the same side.
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Neuroscience letters · Apr 2012
Periaqueductal gray stimulation suppresses spontaneous pain behavior in rats.
Methods for evaluating analgesic effect for spontaneous pain are increasingly important because it is reported by most patients with neuropathic pain. The present study assessed the analgesic effects of periaqueductal gray (PAG) stimulation in the spared nerve injury (SNI) model of neuropathic pain of the rat. Spontaneous rapid paw withdrawal movements were used as the index of spontaneous pain. ⋯ Both analgesic effects lasted 30-40min beyond the 3min stimulation period. In summary, PAG stimulation was effective in alleviating spontaneous pain and mechanical allodynia in the SNI rat. The frequency of spontaneous paw lifting, a behavioral index of spontaneous pain used in this study, will be useful for future testing of therapeutic methods.