Apparent hyperalgesia after lesions of the descending serotonergic pathways is due to increased tail skin temperature

Abstract
It has been suggested that the descending serotonergic pathways exercise a tonic inhibition on nociception in the spinal cord. In this study 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine (5,6-DHT, 20 .mu.g base) injected intrathecally in rats reduced spinal serotonin concentration to 3.5% of control levels without significantly affecting spinal noradrenaline. The lesion reduced the mean tail-flick latency by approximately 35% and increased the mean tail skin temperature by approximately 3.5.degree. C; both parameters gradually returned to normal values within 2-3 weeks. Both in controls and in lesioned animals there was a highly significant negative correlation between tail skin temperature and tail-flick latency. Multiple regression analysis showed that the effect of lesioning on tail-flick latency was non-significant when the effect of skin temperature was taken into account. Thus the reduced tail-flick latency after lesions of descending serotonergic pathways, usually interpreted as increased nociception, may be due to changes in tail skin temperature.