Brain research
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The temporal and spatial expression pattern of Fos protein in spinal dorsal horn neurons was examined by immunohistochemistry in rats with chronic constriction injury (CCI) to the sciatic nerve. In normal animals, a few Fos-immunoreactive (-IR) neurons were detected in the dorsal horn of the lumbar spinal cord. Following induction of CCI, a very large number of Fos-IR neurons appeared in the spinal dorsal horn, but a significant number of Fos-IR neurons were also observed in the contralateral dorsal horn where primary afferents of the injured sciatic nerve rarely project. ⋯ The number of Fos-IR neurons in the dorsal horn gradually decreased, but increased again around PO 15d. On PO 30d, the number of Fos-IR neurons decreased and became comparable to that in normal animals. The present results indicate that the induction of Fos-IR neurons in the dorsal horn caused by CCI is biphasic and reaches its maximal level on PO 3d, near the time of hyperalgesia onset.
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This study investigated the spatial and temporal expressions of mRNA encoding neuropilin (Npn)-1, Npn-2 and semaphorin3A (Sema3A) in the rat brain after occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MAC) distal to the striate branches. The expression of Npn-1 mRNA was transiently upregulated in layers V and VI of the parietal cortex not entering infarction on the lesion side from 3 to 6 h after MCA occlusion. The transient up-regulation of Npn-1 mRNA expression was presumably accompanied by an increase in Npn-1 protein as shown by immunohistochemistry in combination with in situ hybridization histochemistry. ⋯ In the infarct lesion or ischemic core, neuronal expressions of Npn-1, -2 and Sema3A disappeared by 3 days after MCA occlusion as the neurons in situ entered apoptosis or necrosis. In contrast, ED-1-positive microglia/macrophages with Npn-1 and Npn-2 mRNA were observed in the infarct lesion at 1 week after MCA occlusion. These findings suggest that the temporal up-regulation of Npn-1 and Sema 3A mRNA expressions in the non-infarcted parietal cortex on the lesion side is insufficient to induce neuronal cell death possibly because the up-regulated mRNA molecules are not fully translated and that the overexpression of Npn-1 and/or Npn-2 in the ischemic core with degenerating neurons enables activated microglial cells to contact the damaged neurons in situ for phagocytosis.
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Sciatic nerve section in rats evokes chronic limb edema, pain behavior, and hindpaw hyperalgesia, a syndrome resembling the complex regional pain syndrome type II (CRPS II or causalgia) in man. Glucocorticoids such as methylprednisolone (MP) have been used as analgesic and anti-edematous agents in patients suffering from CRPS, and interestingly these therapeutic effects appear to persist in some patients after stopping the medication. Similar to the CRPS clinical response to glucocorticoids, we now demonstrate that chronic hindpaw edema in the sciatic transection CRPS model is reversed by a continuous infusion of MP (3 mg/kg/day over 21 days), and this anti-edematous effect persists for at least 1 week after discontinuing MP. ⋯ MP inhibition was dose- and time-dependent, with an ED(50) of 1.2 mg/kg/day for a 14-day continuous infusion of MP, and a maximum inhibitory effect requiring 17 days of MP infusion (3 mg/kg/day). MP (3 mg/kg/day for 14 days) also blocked both capsaicin- and SP-evoked neurogenic extravasation, indicating a post-junctional inhibitory effect. Our interpretation is that increased spontaneous neurogenic extravasation in this CRPS model contributed to the development and maintenance of hindpaw edema, and that chronic MP administration dose- and time-dependently blocked neurogenic extravasation at a post-junctional level, thus reversing spontaneous extravasation and limb edema in this model.
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Several lines of evidence indicate that Group I metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) 1alpha receptors are involved in the processing of nociceptive information in the spinal cord. The goals of the present study are to document the role of mGlu1alpha receptors in peripheral nociception. To accomplish this we investigate the presence of mGlu1alpha receptors on peripheral primary afferent fibers and determine the behavioral effects of (S)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (S-DHPG), which is an mGlu1/5 receptor agonist and (RS)-1-aminoindan-1, 5-dicarboxylic acid (AIDA), a selective mGluR1alpha antagonist, on mechanical and thermal sensitivity and formalin-induced nociceptive behaviors. ⋯ Intraplantar injection of 40 microM AIDA+2% formalin significantly attenuates phase 2 lifting/licking and flinching behavior and this AIDA-induced effect is blocked with co-injection of 1 microM S-DHPG. In behavioral tests, intraplantar S-DHPG (0.1, 1.0, 10 mM) does not change tail flick latencies or paw withdrawal latencies to heat stimulation. These data indicate that mGlu1alpha receptors are present on peripheral cutaneous axons and activation of peripheral mGlu1alpha receptors contributes to mechanical allodynia and inflammatory pain but not thermal hyperalgesia.
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We investigated the anti-hyperalgesic effect of neutralizing antibodies (AB) to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) in two murine models of neuropathy, the chronic constrictive sciatic nerve injury (CCI) which has a strong epineurial inflammatory component, and the partial sciatic nerve transection (PST), a 'pure' nerve injury model. In both models a single AB injection intra-operatively as well as on day 4 reduced thermal hyperalgesia significantly, whereas mechanical allodynia was only reduced with intraoperative but not with delayed treatment.