Experimental neurology
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Experimental neurology · Jun 1996
Graded histological and locomotor outcomes after spinal cord contusion using the NYU weight-drop device versus transection.
Injury reproducibility is an important characteristic of experimental models of spinal cord injuries (SCI) because it limits the variability in locomotor and anatomical outcome measures. Recently, a more sensitive locomotor rating scale, the Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan scale (BBB), was developed but had not been tested on rats with severe SCI complete transection. Rats had a 10-g rod dropped from heights of 6.25, 12.5, 25, and 50 mm onto the exposed cord at Tl 0 using the NYU device. ⋯ The SCI + TX group had a significantly greater frequency of HL movements during open field testing than the TX group (p < 0.005). There was also a trend for the SCI + TX group to have higher locomotor scores than the TX group (p > 0.05). Thus, spared descending systems appear to modify segmental systems which produce greater behavioral improvements than isolated cord systems.
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Experimental neurology · Jun 1996
Restraint reduces formalin-test pain but the effect is not influenced by lesions of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus.
Previous research indicates that the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) plays an important role in the development of stress-induced analgesia (SIA). Research implicating the PVN in SIA has generally employed the cold-water swim as the stressor and a phasic pain test, such as the tail-flick test, as the pain model. The present study, using the formalin test for tonic pain, investigated the effect of PVN lesions on (1) tonic pain responses and (2) SIA caused by 30 min of restraint. ⋯ The short-term SIA is reflected as a decrease in paw licking, whereas the long-term SIA is reflected as a decrease in paw elevation. In addition, PVN lesions failed to alter SIA during both phases of the formalin test. The differential effect of restraint on pain responses during the two phases of the formalin test and the lack of effect of PVN lesions on SIA for tonic pain suggest that stress engages multiple endogenous pain inhibitory systems.