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Neonatal nociceptive somatic stimulation differentially modifies the activity of spinal neurons in rats and results in altered somatic and visceral sensation. J Physiol 2006 May 01;572(Pt 3):775-87

Date

03/04/2006

Pubmed ID

16513666

Pubmed Central ID

PMC1779998

DOI

10.1113/jphysiol.2006.108258

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-33645838206 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   28 Citations

Abstract

The role ofintramuscular, low pH saline injections during the neonatal period in the development and maintenance of visceral hyperalgesia has not been systematically studied. We aimed to investigate alterations in visceral sensation and neural circuitry that result from noxious stimuli in early life. Neonatal male Sprague-Dawley rats received sterile saline injections of pH 4.0 or 7.4 in the gastrocnemius muscle starting at postnatal day 8. Injections were given unilaterally every other day for 12 days ending on postnatal day 20. A third group received needle prick only on the same shedule as the second group, while a fourth group was left naïve. At 2 months of age, rats underwent assessment of cutaneous and deep somatic sensitivity using von Frey filaments and gastrocnemius muscle pinch, respectively. A visceromotor response (VMR) to graded colorectal distension (CRD; 10-80 mmHg for 30 s with 180 s interstimulus intervals) was recorded. Extracellular single-unit recordings from the thoracolumbar spinal neurons (T13-L1) were performed in adult pH 4.0 injected and naïve controls. There was no difference in the threshold for response to mechanical stimulation of the paw in rats injected with pH 4.0 saline compared to all other groups. Conversely, rats treated with pH 4.0 saline showed a significant bilateral reduction in withdrawal threshold to muscle pinch as adults (P < 0.05). At colorectal distensions > or = 20 mmHg, an increase in the VMR was observed in the pH 4.0 injected group compared to all other groups (P < 0.05). Spinal neurons were classified as short latency abrupt (SL-A) or short latency sustained (SL-S). Spontaneous firing of SL-S (20.6 +/- 2.2 impulses s(-1)), but not SL-A neurons (5.3 +/- 0.9 impulses s(-1)) in the pH 4.0 treated rats was significantly higher than in control rats (SL-S, 2.6 +/- 0.8 impulses s(-1); SL-A, 3.1 +/- 0.7 impulses s(-1)). The response of SL-S neurons to CRD in the pH 4.0 group was significantly higher at distension pressures > or = 20 mmHg. Nociceptive somatic stimulation in neonatal rats results in chronic deep somatic and visceral hyperalgesia in adulthood. Colorectal distension-sensitive SL-S neurons are primarily sensitized to neonatal somatic stimulation.

Author List

Miranda A, Peles S, Shaker R, Rudolph C, Sengupta JN

Authors

Adrian Miranda MD Adjunct Professor in the Pediatrics department at Medical College of Wisconsin
Jyoti N. Sengupta PhD Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin
Reza Shaker MD Assoc Provost, Sr Assoc Dean, Ctr Dir, Chief, Prof in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Action Potentials
Adaptation, Physiological
Animals
Animals, Newborn
Hyperalgesia
Male
Neural Inhibition
Neurons
Physical Stimulation
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Sensory Thresholds
Sodium Chloride
Spinal Cord
Touch
Viscera