| Literature DB >> 35740347 |
Péter Sántha1, Szandra Lakatos1, Ágnes Horváth2, Mária Dux1, Gábor Jancsó1.
Abstract
Perineural treatment of peripheral nerves with capsaicin produces a long-lasting selective regional thermo- and chemo-analgesia and elimination of the neurogenic inflammatory response involving degeneration of nociceptive afferent fibers. In this study, we examined longitudinal changes in mustard oil-induced sensory neurogenic vasodilatation and plasma extravasation following perineural capsaicin treatment of the rat saphenous nerve utilizing scanning laser Doppler imaging and vascular labeling with colloidal silver. Capsaicin treatment resulted in a marked decrease in mustard oil-induced vasodilatation in the skin area served by the saphenous nerve. Repeated imaging of the vasodilatatory response showed no recovery for at least 7 weeks. However, following transection and ligation of the capsaicin-treated saphenous nerve, a substantial recovery of the vasodilatatory response was observed, suggesting a reinnervation of the chemodenervated skin area by collateral sprouting of neighboring intact sciatic nerve afferents. Elimination of the recovered vascular reaction by capsaicin treatment of the sciatic nerve supported this conclusion. Similar results have been obtained by using the vascular labeling technique. These findings indicate an inhibitory effect of persisting cutaneous nerve fibers on the collateral sprouting of intact nerve fibers into the chemodenervated skin area. These observations may bear implications for the development of sensory disturbances following peripheral nerve injuries.Entities:
Keywords: TRPA1; capsaicin TRPV1; collateral sprouting; neurogenic inflammation; scanning laser Doppler perfusion imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740347 PMCID: PMC9220090 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10061326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1(A) Schematic illustration of the types and sequence of surgical interventions applied in this study. (B) Timeline of the experiments illustrating the sequence of surgical interventions and functional testing with laser Doppler imaging (LDI) following perineural capsaicin treatment of the saphenous nerve.
Figure 2(A) Time course of mustard oil–induced increases in perfusion of the medial (dashed line) and lateral (solid line) parts of the dorsal skin of the right hind paws of rats (n = 5). (B) Time course of mustard oil–induced increases in perfusion of the medial (dashed red line) and lateral (solid line) parts of the dorsal skin of the right hind paws of rats 1 week after perineural treatment of the right saphenous nerve (n = 5). *: significantly different from the perfusion of the lateral part of the dorsum of the hind paw skin. (C) A series of perfusion images illustrating the time course of mustard oil–induced increases in blood flow in the dorsum of a rat hind paw. The right saphenous nerve was treated with capsaicin 5 days before the experiment. Scale bar represents 5 mm.
Figure 3(A) Calculation of denervated skin areas following perineural capsaicin treatment of the saphenous nerve and subsequent transection of that nerve 7 weeks later (n = 9). *: significantly different from the skin area determined 1 week after perineural capsaicin treatment. (B) Calculation of reinnervated skin areas following transection of the saphenous nerve treated perineurally with capsaicin 7 weeks previously (n = 7). *: significantly different from the denervated area determined 1 week after perineural capsaicin treatment. (C) A series of laser Doppler scanning perfusion images of the rat hind paw following perineural capsaicin treatment of the saphenous nerve and subsequent transection of the saphenous nerve and perineural capsaicin treatment of the sciatic nerve 7 and 11 weeks later, respectively. Scale bar represents 5 mm.
Figure 4(A) A microphotograph illustrating vascular labeling of the hind paw skin of a rat following an intravenous injection of a colloidal silver solution. Colloidal silver–labeled small blood vessels (venules) are present in the innervated but not the denervated skin. (B) A series of photographs taken from the right hind paw of a rat to illustrate the appearance of mustard oil–induced vascular labeling in the innervated skin areas 4 weeks after perineural capsaicin treatment of the saphenous nerve and after a subsequent transection of that nerve. Scale bar represents 5 mm. The quantitative data showing the proportions of the denervated and reinnervated skin areas are shown in (C) (n = 4, *: significantly different from the skin area determined 4 weeks after perineural capsaicin treatment) and (D) (n = 4, *: significantly different from the skin area determined 4 weeks after perineural capsaicin treatment), respectively.