Neuroscience letters
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Neuroscience letters · Jun 2006
Propentofylline attenuates vincristine-induced peripheral neuropathy in the rat.
The development of painful peripheral neuropathy is a dose-limiting side effect of numerous cancer chemotherapeutic agents. The present study utilized a rodent model of vincristine-induced neuropathy to determine whether a glial modulating agent, propentofylline, could attenuate vincristine-induced mechanical allodynia. Intravenous vincristine administered on days 1 through 5 and days 8 through 11 produced mechanical allodynia using 2 and 12 g von Frey filaments. ⋯ Daily intraperitoneal propentofylline at 10 mg/kg attenuated mechanical allodynia induced by vincristine administration. In addition, propentofylline was found to decrease spinal microglial and astrocytic activation on day 15. These data suggest that central glial cells may play an important role in the development of painful neuropathy following vincristine administration.
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Neuroscience letters · May 2006
Comparative StudyNeurophysiological reactivity before a migraine attack.
Migraine patients are characterized by increased amplitudes and reduced habituation of the contingent negative variation (CNV) response, especially before a migraine attack. As shown previously, migraine provoking and precipitating agents can cause CNV abnormalities. However, it is unclear whether the temporal relation to the migraine attack determines how the brain reacts to a migraine precipitant. ⋯ The neurophysiological reactivity to stress in migraineurs was compared with those of healthy subjects. Before a migraine attack, migraine patients demonstrated significantly more pronounced neurophysiological reactivity to stress: the amplitude of the early CNV component was more increased and its habituation was more reduced in the stress condition, especially 1-3 days before an attack compared with changes of CNV amplitudes and habituation under stress obtained after an attack, during the headache-free interval, or in healthy controls. The study demonstrates that the brain of migraine patients is characterized by increased susceptibility to migraine provoking agents before an actual attack.
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Neuroscience letters · May 2006
Comparative StudyResponse to spinal cord stimulation in variants of the spared nerve injury pain model.
Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is a treatment given to patients with drug-resistant neuropathic pain, in particular pain resulting from peripheral nerve injury. However, the reasons why some patients develop neuropathic pain and why SCS is not effective in all patients with this chronic pain are not fully understood. The present study compares the response to SCS and the yield of neuropathic animals in variants of the spared nerve injury (SNI) model introduced by Decosterd and Woolf (I. ⋯ There was a tendency that the efficacy of SCS in suppressing allodynia was inversely related to the severity of hypersensitivity. In conclusion, modifications of the SNI model provide a reproducible incidence of neuropathic hypersensitivity and an increased responsiveness to SCS. These variants may prove suitable for future research on the mechanisms involved in pain relief with SCS.
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Neuroscience letters · May 2006
Comparative StudyComparison of three models of neuropathic pain in mice using a new method to assess cold allodynia: the double plate technique.
The recent identification of receptors sensitive to cold stimuli increased the significance of using mice to study cold allodynia, one of the important features of neuropathic pain. However, commonly used techniques (simple cold plate and acetone technique) may be inappropriate to study cold allodynia in mice because of problems of interpretation. We have developed a new method for assessing aversion to a cold non-noxious stimulus. ⋯ Pharmacological validation of this technique showed that CCI induced cold allodynia was alleviated by gabapentin. In conclusion, the double plate technique provides a new, relevant method for assessing cold allodynia in mice. The advantages and drawbacks with the other techniques are discussed.
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Neuroscience letters · May 2006
Comparative StudyInflammation of craniofacial muscle induces widespread mechanical allodynia.
The modulation of behavioral responses evoked by local and distant nociceptive stimuli following a discrete somatic injection of complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) was examined in rats. Inflammation of one craniofacial muscle evoked mechanical allodynia not only in the region of inflammation but also secondary mechanical allodynia in the contralateral head, ipsilateral hindpaw, and contralateral hindpaw. In contrast to this, CFA-induced inflammation of either the hindpaw or gastrocnemius muscle evoked mechanical allodynia restricted to the hindlimb region. The widespread modulation of nocifensive behavior evoked by inflammation of deep craniofacial tissue found in this study resembles the widespread deep tissue pain reported in fibromyalgia, whiplash injury and some temporomandibular disorders and thus may provide insight into the mechanisms of these musculoskeletal pathologies.