Behavioral and electrophysiological assessment of hyperalgesia and changes in dorsal horn responses following partial sciatic nerve ligation in rats
- 1 August 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 66 (2) , 297-306
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(96)03023-0
Abstract
Behavioral and electrophysiological methods were used to investigate the hyperalgesia and allodynia, and functional changes in lumbar spinal dorsal horn neurons, in a model of neuropathic pain (Selzer et al. 1990) involving ligation of one-third to one-half of one sciatic nerve in rats. One and 5 weeks following ligation, there was a significant reduction in hind limb withdrawal latency to noxious radiant heat on the operated side and, to a lesser degree, on the unoperated side. By 16 weeks, heat withdrawal latencies were reduced about equally (approximately 40%) on both sides. Withdrawal threshold to mechanical pressure was markedly reduced within 1 week on the operated side, and decreased in a time-dependent manner on the unoperated side. Heat withdrawal latency and von Frey withdrawal thresholds were not significantly affected in sham-operated rats. The same rats were tested in a paradigm measuring the isometric force of hind limb withdrawals elicited by graded noxious contact heat stimuli (38-52 degrees C, 5 sec). Withdrawal force increased monotonically with stimulus temperature starting at a threshold of approximately 40 degrees C. Stimulus-response functions were not significantly different between a sham-operated group and groups tested 5 (acute) and 16 weeks (chronic) after partial sciatic nerve ligation. Following behavioral testing, the animals were deeply anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium to allow electrophysiological recording of responses of single lumbar dorsal horn wide-dynamic range-type neurons to mechanical and noxious thermal stimulation of the hind paw. Recordings were made from 6 sham-operated rats (26 neurons ipsilateral and 31 contralateral to the operated leg), from 7 rats receiving partial sciatic nerve ligation 5 weeks previously (29 ipsilateral and 29 contralateral to ligation), and from 7 rats receiving partial sciatic ligation 16 weeks previously (18 ipsilateral, 29 contralateral to ligation). In several ligated rats we were unable to find heat-responsive neurons with cutaneous receptive fields on the hind paw ipsilateral to the ligation. For the neurons that were sensitive to heat, responses increased monotonically from a threshold of 40-42 degrees C. Neuronal stimulus-response functions for heat were not significantly different between ipsi- and contralateral (to operated) sides in the sham, 5-week or 16-week post-ligation groups, or between sham and 5- or 16-week post-ligation groups. Mechanical receptive field areas were not significantly different between ipsi- and contralateral sides in the sham and 5-week post-ligation groups, or between sham and 5-week post-ligation groups. However, receptive field areas were significantly larger in the 16-week post-ligation group (both ipsi- and contralateral to ligation) compared to sham and 5-week post-ligation groups. The results suggest that allodynia may be associated with a chronic enhancement of neuronal mechanosensitivity, but that the thermal hyperalgesia is not associated with enhanced neuronal responsiveness or force of withdrawal.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- A study of early ongoing activity in dorsal horn units following sciatic nerve constrictionNeuroReport, 1994
- Partial sciatic nerve ligation results in an enlargement of the receptive field and enhancement of the response of dorsal horn neurons to noxious stimulation by an adenosine agonistPain, 1994
- An experimental model for peripheral neuropathy produced by segmental spinal nerve ligation in the ratPain, 1992
- Peripheral nerve injury triggers central sprouting of myelinated afferentsNature, 1992
- A novel behavioral model of neuropathic pain disorders produced in rats by partial sciatic nerve injuryPAIN®, 1990
- Transsynaptic degeneration in the superficial dorsal horn after sciatic nerve injury: effects of a chronic constriction injury, transection, and strychninePain, 1990
- A model of peripheral mononeuropathy in the ratPain, 1990
- Further evidence for ‘pain-related’ behaviours in a model of unilateral peripheral mononeuropathyPain, 1990
- A peripheral mononeuropathy in rat that produces disorders of pain sensation like those seen in manPain, 1988
- A new and sensitive method for measuring thermal nociception in cutaneous hyperalgesiaPAIN®, 1988