Somatosensory & motor research
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The Marstock method of limits was used to obtain thresholds for detection of cooling, warming, cold pain and heat pain for 34 young adults, upon eight spatially matched sites on the left and right sides of the face, the right ventral forearm and the scalp. Male and female subjects were tested by both a male and a female experimenter. Neither the experimenter nor the gender of the subject individually influenced the thresholds. ⋯ Subjects' sensitivities to nonpainful cool and warmth were less predictive of their sensitivities to painful cold and heat, respectively. Short-term within-subject variability increased with the magnitude of the thresholds. The lower the threshold, the more similar were repeated measurements of it, within a 5-25 s period.
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Wide Dynamic Range (WDR) neurons in the spinal cord receive inputs from the contralateral side that, under normal conditions, are ineffective in generating an active response. These inputs are effective when the target WDRs change their excitability conditions. To further reveal the mechanisms supporting this effectiveness shift, we investigated the weight of the excitation of the contralateral neurons on the target WDR responses. ⋯ Furthermore, the neurons on both sides of the spinal cord showed significantly increased spontaneous activity and amplified responses to ipsilateral noxious stimulation. These findings indicate that the contralateral input participates in the circuit dynamics of spinal nociceptive transmission, by modulating the excitability of the postsynaptic neurons. A possible functional role of such a nociceptive transmission circuit in neuronal sensitization following unilateral nerve injury is hypothesized.