Disruption of Spinal Noradrenergic Activation Delays Recovery of Acute Incision-Induced Hypersensitivity and Increases Spinal Glial Activation in the Rat - 01/02/16

Abstract |
Results of clinical studies suggest that descending inhibitory controls from the brainstem are important for speeding recovery from pain after surgery. We examined the effects of destroying spinally projecting noradrenergic neurons via intrathecally administered antibody to dopamine β-hydroxylase conjugated to saporin (DβH-saporin) on recovery in an acute incisional pain model. Mechanical and thermal paw withdrawal thresholds and nonevoked spontaneous guarding scores were tested for several weeks postoperatively and analyzed using mixed effects growth curve modeling. DβH-saporin treatment resulted in a significant prolongation in the duration of mechanical and to a lesser degree thermal hypersensitivity in the ipsilateral paw of incised rats but did not increase the duration of spontaneous guarding. DβH-saporin treatment was also associated with increased microglial and astrocyte activation in the ipsilateral spinal cord 21 days after incision compared with immunoglobulin G-saporin treated controls. Chronic intrathecal administration of the α2 adrenergic receptor antagonist atipamezole (50–200 μg/d) produced similar effects. These data suggest that spinally projecting noradrenergic pathways and spinal α2 adrenergic receptor activation are important for speeding recovery from hypersensitivity after surgical incision possibly by reducing spinal glial activation. Interventions that augment the noradrenergic system might be important to speed recovery from pain after surgery.
Perspective |
Endogenous descending spinal noradrenergic activation promotes resolution of incision-induced hypersensitivity and inhibits spinal microglial and astrocyte activation in part through α2 adrenergic receptors.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | Spinal noradrenergic signaling hastened resolution of hypersensitivity after plantar incision. |
• | Blockade of spinal noradrenergic signaling increased spinal glial activation after incision. |
• | Mixed growth curve analysis was used to model pain-related behaviors after plantar incision in the rat. |
Key words : Descending inhibition, postoperative pain, chronification, glial plasticity, growth curve
Plan
This work was supported by NIH grant GM099863 awarded to C.M. Peters and NIH grant GM48085 awarded to J.C. Eisenach. |
|
All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest regarding the material discussed in the article. |
Vol 17 - N° 2
P. 190-202 - février 2016 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?