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- Title
Persistent Pain after Spinal Cord Injury Is Maintained by Primary Afferent Activity.
- Authors
Yang, Qing; Wu, Zizhen; Hadden, Julia K.; Odem, Max A.; Zuo, Yan; Crook, Robyn J.; Frost, Jeffrey A.; Walters, Edgar T.
- Abstract
Chronic pain caused by insults to the CNS (central neuropathic pain) is widely assumed to be maintained exclusively by central mechanisms. However, chronic hyperexcitablility occurs in primary nociceptors after spinal cord injury (SCI), suggesting that SCI pain also depends upon continuing activity of peripheral sensory neurons. The present study in rats (Rattus norvegicus) found persistent upregulation after SCI of protein, but not mRNA, for a voltage-gated Na + channel, Nav1.8, that is expressed almost exclusively in primary afferent neurons. Selectively knocking down Nav1.8 after SCI suppressed spontaneous activity in dissociated dorsal root ganglion neurons, reversed hypersensitivity of hindlimb withdrawal reflexes, and reduced ongoing pain assessed by a conditioned place preference test. These results show that activity in primary afferent neurons contributes to ongoing SCI pain.
- Subjects
CHRONIC pain; SPINAL cord injuries; NOCICEPTORS; SENSORY neurons; RATTUS norvegicus
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2014, Vol 34, Issue 32, p10765
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5316-13.2014