Literature DB >> 32569083

Acute orofacial pain leads to prolonged changes in behavioral and affective pain components.

Erika Ivanna Araya1, Darciane Favero Baggio1, Laura de Oliveira Koren1, Roberto Andreatini1, Rainer K W Schwarting2, Gerald W Zamponi3, Juliana Geremias Chichorro1.   

Abstract

Acute pain that persists for a few days is associated with a reduction in patients' quality of life. Orofacial persistent pain promotes psychological disorders such as anxiety, impairs daily essential activities such as eating, and results in decreased social interaction. Here, we investigated whether rats subjected to orofacial formalin injection or intraoral incision surgery display persistent facial heat hyperalgesia, ongoing pain, anxiety-like behavior, and changes in ultrasonic vocalization. Orofacial formalin injection or intraoral incision caused facial heat hyperalgesia for 3 days compared with saline-injected and sham animals. In addition, both experimental groups showed a reduction in the number of entries and in the time spent in the open arms in the elevated plus maze test on day 3, suggesting that anxiety-like behavior developed as a consequence of persistent pain. At this time point, both groups also displayed a reduction in the number of 50-kHz calls, specifically in the flat subtype, which suggests a decrease in social communication. Moreover, on day 3 after surgery, systemic morphine produced robust conditioned place preference in rats subjected to intraoral incision compared with sham, and the former group also presented increased spontaneous facial grooming, revealing the presence of ongoing pain. Finally, Western blot and immunohistochemistry analysis showed a reduction in tyrosine hydroxylase expression in the nucleus accumbens, which may reflect a decrease in mesolimbic dopaminergic activity. Altogether, the results demonstrate that acute orofacial pain causes prolonged changes in behavioral and affective pain components, which may be related to dopaminergic changes in the nucleus accumbens.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32569083     DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001970

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


  3 in total

1.  Antinociceptive effects of bupivacaine and its sulfobutylether-β-cyclodextrin inclusion complex in orofacial pain.

Authors:  Juliana Souza de Freitas Domingues; Silmara Martins Dias Dos Santos; Julia das Neves Rodrigues Ferreira; Bianca Miguel Monti; Darciane Favero Baggio; Wagner Hummig; Erika Ivanna Araya; Eneida de Paula; Juliana Geremias Chichorro; Luiz Eduardo Nunes Ferreira
Journal:  Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol       Date:  2022-08-01       Impact factor: 3.195

2.  Fear Extinction-Based Inter-Individual and Sex Differences in Pain-Related Vocalizations and Anxiety-like Behaviors but Not Nocifensive Reflexes.

Authors:  Peyton Presto; Guangchen Ji; Riley Junell; Zach Griffin; Volker Neugebauer
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2021-10-11

3.  Trigeminal neuropathic pain causes changes in affective processing of pain in rats.

Authors:  Erika I Araya; Eduardo C Carvalho; Roberto Andreatini; Gerald W Zamponi; Juliana G Chichorro
Journal:  Mol Pain       Date:  2022 Jan-Dec       Impact factor: 3.395

  3 in total

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