4 resultados para Nociception

em University of Queensland eSpace - Australia


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The functional integrity of the immune system is essential for peripheral antinociception. Previous studies have demonstrated that immune cells elicit potent antinociception in inflamed tissues and that corticotropin-releasing factor-induced antinociception is significantly inhibited in animals that have undergone cyclosporin A (CsA)-induced immunosuppression. In this study, we examined the effect of a single bolus of CsA on inflammatory nociception. CsA-treated rats had substantially increased nociception compared with nonimmunosuppressed rats, consistent with a reduction in circulating and infiltrating lymphocytes. Furthermore, CsA-treated rats had inhibition of corticotropin-releasing factor-induced immune-derived antinociception, which was dose-dependently reversed by IV injection of concanavalin A-activated donor lymphocytes (1.0-7.0 X 10(6) cells/0.1 mL). In conclusion, our findings provided further evidence that opioid-containing immune cells are essential for peripheral analgesia. It is evident from these findings that control of inflammatory pain relies heavily on a functioning immune system.

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The infrapatellar fat pad has been implicated as a possible source of anterior knee pain. This study examined the nature, distribution and time-course of experimentally induced pain in the infrapatellar fat pad. Hypertonic saline (5%) was injected into the medial fat pad of 11 healthy individuals with no history of knee pain. Severity of pain was assessed at rest and during activity using an 11 point numerical rating scale (NRS) at regular intervals over 15-30 min following injection. Participants described the size of the pain region from a series of different sized circles while the area and type of pain was established from a body chart and the McGill pain questionnaire. The effect of pain on temperature-pain threshold and sensory thresholds of the anterior knee was assessed. Participants generally reported a deep aching pain that peaked in severity around 3 min and gradually declined over 15 min. Pain levels were not altered by clinical manoeuvres designed to impinge the fat pad. The size of the pain region was related to pain intensity. Pain was most commonly felt in the region of the fat pad medial to the patella, although some individuals reported proximal referred pain as far as the groin region. Thermal and sensory thresholds were not altered at a region close to the injection site during the experimental pain. These results suggest that nociceptive stimulation of the infrapatellar fat pad may cause anterior knee pain that is not necessarily confined locally particularly if pain is severe. This has implications for the investigation of pathological structures in patients presenting clinically with anterior knee pain and provides an experimental model of anterior knee pain. (C) 2003 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Pyramidal neurons in the lateral amygdala discharge trains of action potentials that show marked spike frequency adaptation, which is primarily mediated by activation of a slow calcium-activated potassium current. We show here that these neurons also express an alpha-dendrotoxin- and tityustoxin-Kalpha-sensitive voltage-dependent potassium current that plays a key role in the control of spike discharge frequency. This current is selectively targeted to the primary apical dendrite of these neurons. Activation of mu-opioid receptors by application of morphine or D-Ala(2)-N-Me-Phe(4)-Glycol(5)-enkephalin (DAMGO) potentiates spike frequency adaptation by enhancing the alpha-dendrotoxin-sensitive potassium current. The effects of mu-opioid agonists on spike frequency adaptation were blocked by inhibiting G-proteins with N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and by blocking phospholipase A(2). Application of arachidonic acid mimicked the actions of DAMGO or morphine. These results show that mu-opioid receptor activation enhances spike frequency adaptation in lateral amygdala neurons by modulating a voltage-dependent potassium channel containing Kv1.2 subunits, through activation of the phospholipase A(2)-arachidonic acid-lipoxygenases cascade.

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Oxycodone is a potent opioid agonist that has been in clinical use for many decades. However, it has only recently been appreciated that oxycodone has a distinctly different pharmacology from that of morphine. Importantly, when administered directly into the lateral ventricle of the rat brain, oxycodone produces dose-dependent, naloxone-reversible pain relief in an acute pain model, indicating that oxycodone itself has intrinsic anti-nociceptive effects (Leow & Smith, 1994). However, oxycodone's intrinsic pain-relieving effects are not attenuated by naloxonazine (-selective opioid antagonist) in a dose that completely blocks the anti-nociceptive effects of an equi-analgesic dose of morphine. Furthermore, the anti-nociceptive effects of intracerebroventricular (icv) oxycodone are completely attenuated by nor-binaltorphimine (-selective opioid antagonist) in a dose that has no significant effect on the levels of anti-nociception evoked by an equi-effective dose of morphine (Ross & Smith, 1997).