Literature DB >> 7086482

Peripheral neural mechanisms of cutaneous hyperalgesia following mild injury by heat.

R H LaMotte, J G Thalhammer, H E Torebjörk, C J Robinson.   

Abstract

Pain thresholds in humans were determined for heat stimulations of the skin before and after a mild injury induced by a single conditioning stimulus (CS) of 50 degrees C and 100 sec duration. The same stimuli were delivered to the receptive fields of C fiber and A fiber mechanoheat-sensitive nociceptors (CMH and AMH nociceptors, respectively) and of low threshold warm and cold receptors in the anesthetized monkey and to the receptive fields of CMH nociceptors recorded percutaneously from the peroneal nerve of awake humans. Pain thresholds in normal skin were matched only by the response thresholds of CMH and not AMH nociceptors. Immediately following heat injury, some pain thresholds and CMH response thresholds were elevated, but by 5 to 10 min after the CS, pain and CMH thresholds were lowered to 2 to 6 degrees C below normal (hyperalgesia and nociceptor sensitization). No other type of cutaneous receptor studied exhibited changes in threshold similar to those observed for pain and for CMH nociceptors. The magnitude of hyperalgesia in humans and the magnitude of sensitization of CMH nociceptors in monkeys following heat injury were greater for hairy than for glabrous skin. The time course of the development of hyperalgesia was not altered by ischemia or conduction block in A fibers. The results support the conclusion that altered activity in CMH nociceptors is a major peripheral determinant of cutaneous hyperalgesia following a mild heat injury to the skin.

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Year:  1982        PMID: 7086482      PMCID: PMC6564351     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  35 in total

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2.  Early postnatal loss of heat sensitivity among cutaneous myelinated nociceptors in Swiss-Webster mice.

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3.  Unresponsive afferent nerve fibres in the sural nerve of the rat.

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Review 4.  Neuroanatomy of the pain system and of the pathways that modulate pain.

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5.  Argon laser induced single cortical responses: a new method to quantify pre-pain and pain perceptions.

Authors:  P Bjerring; L Arendt-Nielsen
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Authors:  Linda Sorkin; Camilla I Svensson; Toni L Jones-Cordero; Michael P Hefferan; W Marie Campana
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7.  The fine tuning of pain thresholds: a sophisticated double alarm system.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-04-23       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Differential brain activation to angry faces by elite warfighters: neural processing evidence for enhanced threat detection.

Authors:  Martin P Paulus; Alan N Simmons; Summer N Fitzpatrick; Eric G Potterat; Karl F Van Orden; James Bauman; Judith L Swain
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-04-14       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 9.  Interoception in anxiety and depression.

Authors:  Martin P Paulus; Murray B Stein
Journal:  Brain Struct Funct       Date:  2010-05-21       Impact factor: 3.270

Review 10.  Short-term synaptic plasticity in the nociceptive thalamic-anterior cingulate pathway.

Authors:  Bai-Chuang Shyu; Brent A Vogt
Journal:  Mol Pain       Date:  2009-09-04       Impact factor: 3.395

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