Brain research
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Centrifugal modulation from the midbrain, pons and medulla of the spinal nociceptive tail flick (TF) reflex evoked by graded noxious heating of the tail was studied in lightly pentobarbital-anaesthetized rats. In initial experiments, the relationship between the intensity of the noxious thermal stimulus and the TF latency was characterized. The thermal stimulus was provided by a lamp focused on the ventral surface of a rat's tail. ⋯ Type II modulations were produced by electrical stimulation in the dorsolateral pons, locus coeruleus-subcoeruleus and in the medial periaqueductal gray. This experimental approach has shown itself to be useful in the characterization of descending inhibition of nociception. Much simpler and less invasive than analogous spinal dorsal horn single cell electrophysiologic studies, it can be used to study the mechanisms of centrifugal modulation of nociceptive flexion reflexes and further establishes the utility of the lightly anaesthetized rat preparation for studies of nociception-antinociception.