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Cited 37 time in webofscience Cited 49 time in scopus
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Adrenergic sensitivity of the sensory receptors modulating mechanical allodynia in a rat neuropathic pain model

Authors
Moon, DELee, DHHan, HCXie, JGCoggeshall, REChung, JM
Issue Date
Apr-1999
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Keywords
causalgia; segmental spinal nerve; sympathectomy; sympathetically maintained pain
Citation
PAIN, v.80, no.3, pp 589 - 595
Pages
7
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PAIN
Volume
80
Number
3
Start Page
589
End Page
595
URI
https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2020.sw.kumedicine/24049
DOI
10.1016/S0304-3959(98)00252-8
ISSN
0304-3959
1872-6623
Abstract
This study focuses on changes in adrenergic sensitivity in untransected sensory axons that innervate an area of skin made neuropathic by transection of neighboring nerves. The segmental nerve injury model is favorable for this since all axons in the L5 and L6 nerves are transected whereas the L4 axons are intact. Earlier findings are that pain behaviors develop after this injury and that these beahviors are ameliorated by sympathectomy, The present study shows that behavior indicating mechanical allodynia can be rekindled after sympathectomy by intradermal norepinephrine and alpha-2 but not alpha-1 adrenergic ligands and the rekindling can be blocked by alpha-2 but not alpha-1 adrenergic antagonists. By contrast neither intradermal norepinephrine nor other adrenergic agonists or antagonists have any demonstrable effects in the normal or after either neuropathic surgery or sympathectomy alone. These data suggest that the combination of neuropathic surgery and sympathectomy results in an upregulation of active alpha-2 adrenergic receptors on the undamaged sensory axons that provide the remaining sensory innervation to a neuropathic area partially denervated by segmental nerve lesions. These changes on undamaged axons presumably compliment similar changes on the transected axone and, thus play a role in the development of neuropathic pain. (C) 1999 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier Science B.V.
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