Literature DB >> 14639156

Development of neuropathic pain in the rat spared nerve injury model is not prevented by a peripheral nerve block.

Marc R Suter1, Michael Papaloïzos, Charles B Berde, Clifford J Woolf, Nicolas Gilliard, Donat R Spahn, Isabelle Decosterd.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The mechanisms responsible for initiation of persistent neuropathic pain after peripheral nerve injury are unclear. One hypothesis is that injury discharge and early ectopic discharges in injured nerves produce activity-dependent irreversible changes in the central nervous system. The aim of this study was to determine whether blockade of peripheral discharge by blocking nerve conduction before and 1 week after nerve injury could prevent the development and persistence of neuropathic pain-like behavior in the spared nerve injury model.
METHODS: Bupivacaine-loaded biodegradable microspheres embedded in fibrin glue were placed in a silicone tube around the sciatic nerve to produce a conduction block. After sensory-motor testing of block efficacy, a spared nerve injury procedure was performed. Development of neuropathic pain behavior was assessed for 4 weeks by withdrawal responses to stimulation (i.e., von Frey filaments, acetone, pinprick, radiant heat) in bupivacaine microspheres-treated animals (n = 12) and in controls (n = 11).
RESULTS: Bupivacaine microspheres treatment produced conduction blockade with a complete lack of sensory responsiveness in the sural territory for 6 to 10 days. Once the block wore off, the degree of hypersensitivity to stimuli was similar in both groups.
CONCLUSIONS: Peripheral long-term nerve blockade has no detectable effect on the development of allodynia or hyperalgesia in the spared nerve injury model. It is unlikely that injury discharge at the time of nerve damage or the early onset of ectopic discharges arising from the injury site contributes significantly to the persistence of stimulus-evoked neuropathic pain in this model.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14639156     DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200312000-00025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  17 in total

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4.  Effect of perioperative perineural injection of dexamethasone and bupivacaine on a rat spared nerve injury model.

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9.  Neuropathic pain: early spontaneous afferent activity is the trigger.

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10.  Large A-fiber activity is required for microglial proliferation and p38 MAPK activation in the spinal cord: different effects of resiniferatoxin and bupivacaine on spinal microglial changes after spared nerve injury.

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