| Literature DB >> 17672895 |
Marie Pertin1, Andrew J Allchorne, Ahmed T Beggah, Clifford J Woolf, Isabelle Decosterd.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical and experimental studies of neuropathic pain support the hypothesis that a functional coupling between postganglionic sympathetic efferent and sensory afferent fibers contributes to the pain. We investigated whether neuropathic pain-related behavior in the spared nerve injury (SNI) rat model is dependent on the sympathetic nervous system.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17672895 PMCID: PMC1950869 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8069-3-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Pain ISSN: 1744-8069 Impact factor: 3.395
Figure 1Tyrosine Hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactivity in transverse sections of sciatic nerve (proximal to SNI injury). Representative microphotography of TH-IR in vehicle treated control animals (right panels), while the signal was abolished in animals injected postnatally with guanethidine (sympathectomized group, left panels).
Figure 2Effect of chemical sympathectomy on the development of neuropathic pain-related behavior induced by SNI. A. Paw withdrawal thresholds to mechanical stimuli using a calibrated series of von Frey hairs were not different between chemically sympathectomized group (sympX, n = 6) and vehicle treated group (control, n = 6) before and after SNI. B. Response to cold using an acetone drop was similar before SNI in both groups. No overall effect was demonstrated, except at the latest time point studied (* p < 0.01). C. Mechanical hyperalgesia evoked by pin prick showed no difference between groups.
Figure 3Delayed effects on cold sensitivity of chemical sympathectomy after SNI. A. Paw withdrawal thresholds to mechanical stimuli using a calibrated series of von Frey hairs were not different between the chemical sympathectomy group (sympX, n = 15) and vehicle treated group (control, n = 12). B. Cold response score was different between groups, lower in the sympathectomized group compared to the control group 8 weeks after SNI (* p < 0.01, n = 15 and 12, respectively) and 11 weeks after SNI (* p < 0.05, n = 9 and 6, respectively). C. Noxious mechanical response score was not different between groups. For all sensory modalities tested, responses measured in the paw ipsilateral to the SNI were significantly different from the responses of the contralateral paw (p < 0.05).
Figure 4Time course of sympathetic fiber (TH-IR positive) sprouting in L4 DRG after SNI compared to sham-treated animals. A, No TH-IR is detectable after sham surgery. B, 4 weeks after SNI, TH-IR positive fibers co-mingle with spinal nerve fibers in the vicinity of DRG and penetrate into the DRG. C, D, 8 weeks after surgery, TH-IR positive fibers are present in the DRG and surround some DRG neurons, scale bar 25 μm.
Figure 5TH-IR and pericellular baskets in injured and non-injured DRG neurons. A to D Representative photomicrograph of double fluorescent immunohistochemistry for ATF3 (green) and TH (red) in L4 DRG 8 weeks after SNI. A and B, TH-IR fibers surround both non-injured (arrow), and injured cells (arrowhead, ATF3 positive). Not all injured neurons (asterisks) are encircled by TH-IR fibers, scale bar 25 μm. C and D, TH-IR pericellular basket structures around non-injured (C) and injured (D) DRG neurons, scale bar 10 μm. E, Quantification of TH-IR pericellular basket in injured and non-injured DRG neurons in control and SNI groups (1, 4 and 8 weeks after surgery).
Effect of sympathectomy on neuropathic pain in the rat: summary of major studies in different experimental models
| 5 d prior | Chemical GU | |||||
| Intra-operative | Surgical | |||||
| 1 w after | Surgical | |||||
| 10 d after | Chemical GU | |||||
| 7 and 4 d prior | Chemical GU | |||||
| Intra-operative | Chemical GU | |||||
| 1 w after | Surgical | |||||
| 7 m after | Chemical GU | |||||
| 1 w prior | Surgical | |||||
| Intra-operative | Surgical | |||||
| Intra-operative | Chemical GU/PM | |||||
| 4 d after | Surgical | |||||
| 1 w after | Surgical | |||||
| 2 w after | Chemical GU/PM | |||||
| 3 w after | Surgical | |||||
| 5 w after | Surgical |
a [21], b [12], c [13], d [25], e [23], f [11], g [15], h [16], i [22], j [26], k [14]
(1)Sympathectomy induces hyperalgesia in sham animals or in contralateral hind paw, (2)Possible direct effect of Guanethidine
sympX: sympathectomy, m: month, w: week, d: day
CCI: Chronic Constriction Injury, PSL: Partial Sciatic Ligation; SNL: Spinal Nerve Ligation
Sympathectomy slightly decreases (↘), decreases (↘↘), almost abolishes (↘↘↘), has no effect (↔) or aggravates (↗) pain hypersensitivity after nerve injury.
For guanethidine monosulfate (GU) and phentolamine mesylate (PM) injections:
a [21]: subcutaneous injections of GU (30 mg/kg), during 4 consecutive days
c [13]: one or two intraperitoneal injections of GU (30 mg/kg)
d [25]: single intraperitoneal injection of GU (30 mg/kg) or PM (0.5 and 4 mg/kg)
g [15]: single intravenous injection of GU (30 mg/kg) or PM (4 mg/kg)