European journal of pain : EJP
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In the present study, we used the electronic version of the von Frey test to investigate the role of cytokines (TNF-alpha and IL-1beta) and chemokines (KC/CXCL-1) in the genesis of mechanical hypernociception during antigen-induced inflammation in mice. The nociceptive test consisted of evoking a hindpaw flexion reflex with a hand-held force transducer (electronic anesthesiometer) adapted with a 0.5 mm(2) polypropylene tip. The intraplantar administration of methylated bovine serum albumin (mBSA) in previously immunized (IM), but not in sham-immunized (SI) mice, induced mechanical hypernociception in a dose-dependent manner. ⋯ Antigen-induced hypernociception was reduced by indomethacin and guanethidine and abolished by the two drugs combined. Together, these results suggest that inflammation associated with an adaptive immune response induces hypernociception that is mediated by an initial release of TNF-alpha, which triggers the subsequent release of IL-1beta and KC/CXCL1. The latter cytokines in turn stimulate the release of the direct-acting final mediators, prostanoids and sympathetic amines.
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Interruption of a continuous noxious heat by a relatively greater noxious heat evokes reductions in pain experience when the original noxious heat returns. The reduction is greater than that evoked by continuous delivery of noxious heat. This disproportionate reduction in pain experience, known as offset analgesia, is presumably mediated by a mechanism different to adaptation or habituation. ⋯ There was no attenuation effect for the unchanging stimuli delivered across the 3 days of testing but attenuation effects enhanced the offset analgesia resulting in a larger offset analgesia effect on days 2 and 3. It is possible that offset analgesia and attenuation are mediated by inter-related mechanisms. Further studies might investigate whether offset analgesia involves inhibitory structures such as the PAG-RVM.
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Distraction interventions are used clinically to relieve pain. Exposure to distracting stimuli causes withdrawal of attention from the painful stimulus and reduces perceived pain. However, the neurobiological mechanisms mediating distraction-induced analgesia are poorly understood due, in part, to a paucity of animal studies modelling this phenomenon. ⋯ Failure to detect any distractor-induced effects on plasma corticosterone levels or aversive behaviours suggests that the stimuli used were non-stressful. HPLC analysis revealed that there was a significant reduction in serotonin and dopamine metabolites in the medial prefrontal cortex in animals exposed to the novel object. These results indicate that exposure to a novel object or arena reduces nociceptive behaviour in rats, effects accompanied by discrete alterations in serotonin and dopamine metabolites in the medial prefrontal cortex.
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EphrinB-EphB receptor signaling plays diverse roles during development, but recently has been implicated in synaptic plasticity in the matured nervous system and in pain processes. The present study investigated the correlation between expression of ephrinB and EphB receptor proteins and chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve and dorsal rhizotomy (DR) in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and spinal cord (SC); and interaction of CCI and DR on expression of these signals. Adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats were employed and thermal sensitivity was determined in the sham operated CCI and DR rats. ⋯ DR suppressed CCI-induced upregulation of ephrinB1 in SC and EphB1 receptor in DRG and SC. These findings indicate that ephrinB-EphB receptor activation and redistribution in DRG and DH neurons after nerve injury could contribute to neuropathic pain. This study may also provide a new mechanism underlying DR-induced analgesia in clinic.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Quality of life, resource consumption and costs of spinal cord stimulation versus conventional medical management in neuropathic pain patients with failed back surgery syndrome (PROCESS trial).
Chronic back and leg pain conditions result in patients' loss of function, reduced quality of life and increased costs to the society. ⋯ The addition of SCS to CMM in patients with neuropathic leg and back pain results in higher costs to health systems but also generates important improvements in patients' EQ-5D over the same period.