Literature DB >> 14659517

Alterations in dorsal horn neurones in a rat model of cancer-induced bone pain.

E C Urch1, T Donovan-Rodriguez, H A Dickenson.   

Abstract

Cancer-induced bone pain is a major clinical problem. A rat model based on intra-tibial injection of MRMT-1 mammary tumour cells was used to mimic progressive cancer-induced bone pain. At the time of stable behavioural changes (decreased thresholds to mechanical and cold stimuli) and bone destruction, in vivo electrophysiology was used to characterize natural (mechanical, thermal, and cold) and electrical-evoked responses of superficial and deep dorsal horn neurones in halothane-anaesthetized rats. Receptive field size was significantly enlarged for superficial neurones in the MRMT-1 animals. Superficial cells were characterised as either nociceptive specific (NS) or wide dynamic range (WDR). The ratio of WDR to NS cells was substantially different between sham operated (growth media alone) (26:74%) and MRMT-1 injected rats (47:53%). NS cells showed no significant difference in their neuronal responses in MRMT-1-injected compared to sham rats. However, superficial WDR neurones in MRMT-1-injected rats had significantly increased responses to mechanical, thermal and electrical (A beta-, C fibre-, and post-discharge evoked response) stimuli. Deep WDR neurones showed less pronounced changes to the superficial dorsal horn, however, the response to thermal and electrical stimuli, but not mechanical, were significantly increased in the MRMT-1-injected rats. In conclusion, the spinal cord is significantly hyperexcitable with previously superficial NS cells becoming responsive to wide-dynamic range stimuli possibly driving this plasticity via ascending and descending facilitatory pathways. The alterations in superficial dorsal horn neurones have not been reported in neuropathy or inflammation adding to the evidence for cancer-induced bone pain reflecting a unique pain state.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14659517     DOI: 10.1016/j.pain.2003.08.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pain        ISSN: 0304-3959            Impact factor:   6.961


  38 in total

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Authors:  Jie Zhang; Daniel J Cavanaugh; Michael I Nemenov; Allan I Basbaum
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4.  Cancer pain physiology.

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5.  Mediation of Movement-Induced Breakthrough Cancer Pain by IB4-Binding Nociceptors in Rats.

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Authors:  Wahida Rahman; Claudia S Bauer; Kirsty Bannister; Jean-Laurent Vonsy; Annette C Dolphin; Anthony H Dickenson
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7.  Behavioral, medical imaging and histopathological features of a new rat model of bone cancer pain.

Authors:  Louis Doré-Savard; Valérie Otis; Karine Belleville; Myriam Lemire; Mélanie Archambault; Luc Tremblay; Jean-François Beaudoin; Nicolas Beaudet; Roger Lecomte; Martin Lepage; Louis Gendron; Philippe Sarret
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Review 8.  Animal models of cancer pain.

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Review 9.  Preclinical and early clinical investigations related to monoaminergic pain modulation.

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Authors:  Ye Cao; Hua Wang; Chen-Yu Chiang; Jonathan O Dostrovsky; Barry J Sessle
Journal:  J Pain       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 5.820

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