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Studies in experimental models and controlled patient trials indicate that opioids are effective in managing neuropathic pain. However, side effects secondary to their central nervous system actions present barriers to their clinical use. Therefore, we examined whether activation of the peripheral mu-opioid receptors (MORs) could effectively alleviate neuropathic pain in rats after L5 spinal nerve...
Peripheral nerve injury may lead to the formation of a painful neuroma. In patients, palpating the tissue overlying a neuroma evokes paraesthesias/dysaesthesias in the distribution of the injured nerve. Previous animal models of neuropathic pain have focused on the mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia that develops at a location distant from the site of injury and not on the pain from direct stimulation...
Growing evidence suggests that uninjured afferents may play an important role in neuropathic pain following nerve injury. The excitability of nociceptive neurons in the L4 spinal nerve appears to be enhanced following an injury to the adjacent L5 spinal nerve. In this study, we investigated whether the action-potential conduction properties of unlesioned, unmyelinated fibers are also altered. A teased-fiber...
Various animal models of neuropathic pain have been developed which involve creating a lesion in a spinal root. We describe a human correlate in which patients developed a neuropathic pain syndrome after having one spinal nerve surgically divided. In some patients with brachial plexus lesions, the C7 spinal nerve from the opposite side is divided and used as a nerve transfer to re-innervate the injured...
An L5 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) in the rat leads to behavioral signs of mechanical hyperalgesia. Our recent finding that an L5 dorsal root rhizotomy did not alter the mechanical hyperalgesia following an L5 SNL suggests that signals originating from the proximal stump of the injured nerve are not essential. We postulate that Wallerian degeneration of L5 nerve fibers leads to altered properties of...
Variations in baseline skin temperature can be encountered in experimental and clinical pain states. Such variations have been shown to greatly alter the response to radiant heat stimuli when the temperature of the stimulus is not controlled. We carried out a psychophysical investigation to examine the influence of baseline skin temperature on pain ratings to temperature-controlled heat stimuli. A...
The development of adrenergic sensitivity in nociceptors has been suggested as a mechanism of neuropathic pain. We sought to determine if nociceptors in the skin of normal subjects exhibit adrenergic sensitivity. We investigated the effects of intradermal administration of norepinephrine, phenylephrine, and brimonidine on heat pain sensitivity. Norepinephrine and phenylephrine (in concentrations ranging...
Tissue injuries, with or without involvement of nerves, may lead to ongoing pain and hyperalgesia to external stimuli. In a subset of patients, the pain is maintained by sympathetic efferent activity (SMP). We investigated if the peripheral administration of the α-adrenergic agonist, norepinephrine (NE), in physiologically relevant doses resulted in pain in patients with SMP. To establish the dose...
The purpose of this study was to examine how pain to punctate mechanical stimuli varies with position within the zone of secondary hyperalgesia. Secondary hyperalgesia was produced by an intradermal injection of capsaicin (50 μg) into the volar forearm of human volunteers (n=9). Before and at 20, 60 and 100 min after the capsaicin injection, a computer-controlled electromechanical stimulator was used...
An injury to a peripheral nerve in animals often leads to signs of neuropathic pain including hyperalgesia to heat, cold and mechanical stimuli. The role of injured and intact nerve fibers in mechanical hyperalgesia was evaluated in rats subjected to an L5 spinal nerve ligation-and-cut ('modified SNL lesion'). To assess the contribution of injured afferents, an L5 dorsal rhizotomy was performed immediately...
Feedback-controlled laser heat was used to stimulate the hairy skin of the hand dorsum and forearm, and heat-evoked cerebral potentials were recorded at midline (Fz, Cz, Pz) and temporal (T3, T4) scalp positions. Based on data from primary afferent electrophysiology a stimulus level (40 o C) was chosen, which is above C-fiber heat threshold, but clearly below Aδ-nociceptor heat threshold in...
The development of α-adrenergic sensitivity in cutaneous nociceptors has been postulated as a mechanism for sympathetically maintained pain (SMP). In order to characterize the adrenergic receptors involved, we investigated the effects of intraplantar administration of α 1 -(prazosin) and α 2 -(yohimbine) adrenergic antagonists and systemic injection of phentolamine, a non-specific...
The L5 spinal nerve ligation model of neuropathic pain in rats has been proposed as a model for sympathetically maintained pain (SMP) based on the effects of surgical or chemical sympathectomy on nerve injury induced behavior. In an attempt to confirm that the lesion produces an animal model of SMP, surgical sympathectomies were independently conducted in two different laboratories (Johns Hopkins...
Cutaneous injection of the capsaicin analog NE-21610 (Procter and Gamble) produces analgesia to heat but not mechanical stimuli in humans. The present study examined whether pretreatment of the skin with NE-21610 prevents the development of hyperalgesia following heat injury. On the 1st day of testing, 7 volunteers received a 30-μl intradermal injection of vehicle to one volar forearm and 10 μg...
Intradermal injection of the capsaicin analogue, NE-21610 (Procter and Gamble), inactivates nociceptors but not low-threshold mechanoreceptors in monkey. The present study examined the effects of cutaneous NE-21610 on heat and mechanical sensation in normal human volunteers. In the first series of experiments, subjects received intradermal (i.d.) injections (30 μl) of the vehicle alone or with the...
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