Brain research
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A unilateral experimental inflammation of the hindlimb produces hyperalgesia to both mechanical and radiant thermal stimuli that is rapid in onset. During this period, parameters of dynorphin biosynthesis are elevated to a much greater degree than those of the enkephalin system. An increase in the content of the peptide dynorphin A(1-8) occurs in the spinal cord segments that receive sensory input from the affected limb. ⋯ Dorsal spinal cord preproenkephalin mRNA is elevated to a lesser degree (50-80%). However, the increase in preproenkephalin mRNA is apparently not enough to yield a measurable increase in the proenkephalin-derived peptide met5-enkephalin-Arg6-Gly7-Leu8, the levels of which showed no significant change during the 14-day inflammatory period. These data suggest the active participation of opioid neurons, especially those containing dynorphin, at the spinal level, in the modulation of sensory afferent input during peripheral inflammatory pain states.