| Literature DB >> 34975424 |
Gizelle N K Fauss1, Misty M Strain2, Yung-Jen Huang3, Joshua A Reynolds1, Jacob A Davis1, Melissa K Henwood1, Christopher R West4, James W Grau1.
Abstract
Pain (nociceptive) input soon after spinal cord injury (SCI) expands the area of tissue loss (secondary injury) and impairs long-term recovery. Evidence suggests that nociceptive stimulation has this effect because it promotes acute hemorrhage. Disrupting communication with the brain blocks this effect. The current study examined whether rostral systems exacerbate tissue loss because pain input drives an increase in systolic blood pressure (BP) and flow that fuels blood infiltration. Rats received a moderate contusion injury to the lower thoracic (T12) spinal cord. Communication with rostral processes was disrupted by cutting the spinal cord 18 h later at T2. Noxious electrical stimulation (shock) applied to the tail (Experiment 1), or application of the irritant capsaicin to one hind paw (Experiment 2), increased hemorrhage at the site of injury. Shock, but not capsaicin, increased systolic BP and tail blood flow in sham-operated rats. Cutting communication with the brain blocked the shock-induced increase in systolic BP and tail blood flow. Experiment 3 examined the effect of artificially driving a rise in BP with norepinephrine (NE) in animals that received shock. Spinal transection attenuated hemorrhage in vehicle-treated rats. Treatment with NE drove a robust increase in BP and tail blood flow but did not increase the extent of hemorrhage. The results suggest pain input after SCI can engage rostral processes that fuel hemorrhage and drive sustained cardiovascular output. An increase in BP was not, however, necessary or sufficient to drive hemorrhage, implicating other brain-dependent processes.Entities:
Keywords: blood pressure; cardiovascular function; hemorrhage; norepinepherine; pain; polytrauma; spinal cord injury; spinal transection
Year: 2021 PMID: 34975424 PMCID: PMC8714654 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2021.733056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Figure 1Noxious electrical stimulation increased BP and hemorrhage after a lower thoracic contusion injury and this effect was blocked by a spinal transection. (A) Experimental design and timeline for experiment 1. (B) Sham-operated rats that received electrical stimulation (Shk) exhibited higher systolic blood pressure over the next 3 h (T0–T3). Transection surgery blocked this effect. (C) Rats treated with electrical stimulation exhibited higher heart rate over the 3 h. (D) Both transected groups and the sham-operated rats that received shock displayed a significant increase in tail blood flow. Sham-operated unshocked animals remained unchanged. (E) Quantification of peak absorbance at 420 nm (the wavelength associated with hemoglobin). Sham shocked rats showed a higher peak absorbance than unshocked rats. Transection surgery blocked this effect. (F) Quantification of hemoglobin content based on formation of cyanomethemoglobin (Drabkin’s assay). Tissue from sham shocked rats contained a higher concentration of hemoglobin relative to animals that had undergone a spinal transection. (G) Immunoblot quantification for hemoglobin showed that tissue samples from sham-operated rats that received shock had higher levels of hemoglobin relative to both the sham-operated unshocked group and both groups that received a transection. Asterisks indicate statistical significance (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, n = 8). An asterisk placed over a group indicates that the group differs from all the others. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean (SEM).
Figure 2Application of the irritant capsaicin to a hind paw increased hemorrhage after a lower thoracic contusion injury and this effect was blocked by a spinal transection. (A) Experimental design and timeline for experiment 2. (B) Application of capsaicin (Cap) to one hind paw did not induce a change in systolic blood pressure. (C) Capsaicin-treated rats exhibited a higher heart rate throughout the 3 h. (D) Only transected rats exhibited a significant rise in tail blood flow after capsaicin treatment. (E) Sham-operated rats that were treated with capsaicin exhibited greater absorbance at 420 nm for hemoglobin. Transection surgery blocked this effect. (F) Drabkin’s assay and western blot (G) showed similar results. Asterisks indicate statistical significance (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001, n = 8). An asterisk placed over a group indicates that the group differs from all the others. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean (SEM).
Figure 3Norepinephrine increased blood pressure in transected but not sham-operated rats. This significant rise did not induce hemorrhage at the injury site. (A) Experimental design and timeline for experiment 3. (B) Sham-operated shocked rats exhibited a rise in systolic blood pressure relative to vehicle-treated shocked animals that were transected. Transected rats that were given NE exhibited the greatest increase in BP. (C) Sham-operated rats exhibited greater heart rate throughout testing. Transected rats that received vehicle exhibited the lowest heart rate throughout the 3 h. (D) Spinally transected animals exhibited higher levels of tail blood flow, relative to sham-operated rats. NE increased tail blood flow in transected, but not sham-operated, rats. (E) Spectrophotometry results at 420 nm for hemoglobin revealed that sham-operated shocked rats exhibited greater absorbance, relative to the transected animals. NE had no effect. (F) Drabkin’s assay and western blot (G) showed a similar pattern. Only sham-operated rats showed an increase in hemoglobin content and expression at the injury site. Asterisks indicate statistical significance (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001, n = 8). An asterisk placed over a group indicates that the group differs from all the others. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean (SEM).