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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 4 April 2002, pp. 1902-1914
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Atkinson Pain Research Laboratory, Division of Neurosurgery, Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona 85013
Craig, A. D. and
D. Andrew.
Responses of Spinothalamic Lamina I Neurons to Repeated Brief
Contact Heat Stimulation in the Cat. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 1902-1914, 2002. It was recently shown that
repeated heat stimulation, using brief contacts (<1 s) with a
preheated thermode at sufficiently short interstimulus intervals (ISIs
<5 s) and high temperatures (
51°C), will elicit in humans a
sensation of rapidly augmenting "second" (burning) pain with only a
weak "first" (sharp) pain sensation. Most strikingly, at
short intertrial intervals (ITIs >5 s) such summation will reset, or
begin again at baseline. In the present experiments, the responses of
nociceptive lamina I spinothalamic (STT) neurons in the lumbosacral
dorsal horn of barbiturate-anesthetized cats were examined using this
repeated brief contact heat paradigm. The neurons were classified as
nociceptive-specific (NS, n = 8) or polymodal
nociceptive (HPC, n = 8) based on their responses to
quantitative thermal stimuli; all had receptive fields on the glabrous
ventral hindpaw. A pneumatic piston was used to apply a thermode
preheated to 34, 46, 49, 53, or 58°C with a contact dwell time of
~0.7 s to the ventral hindpaw repeatedly (15 times) at ISIs of 2, 3, and 5 s, with 3-5 min between trials. The mean responses of the
16 nociceptive lamina I STT cells showed rapid temporal summation that
was directly dependent on temperature and inversely dependent on ISI,
with the greatest increases occurring between the 3rd and 10th
contacts. The temporal profiles of this family of curves correspond
with the psychophysical data on human sensation. Further analysis
showed that this summation was due to the HPC cells, which all showed
strong summation; in contrast, the NS cells showed little, if any. The
HPC responses to the repeated heat stimuli lagged each contact by ~1
s, consistent with the strong, monosynaptic C-fiber input that is
characteristic of HPC cells and also with the dependence of second pain
on C-fiber nociceptors. HPC cells also displayed the reset phenomenon
at short ITIs, again in correspondence with the psychophysical data.
The summation and the reset displayed by HPC cells were not related to
skin temperature. Thus the results presented in this study, together with those in the preceding article, demonstrate a double dissociation indicating that NS and HPC lamina I STT cells can subserve the qualitatively distinct sensations of first (sharp) and second (burning)
pain, respectively. These findings support the concept that the lamina
I STT projection comprises several discrete sensory channels that are
integrated in the forebrain to generate distinct sensations.
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