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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 2 February 2002, pp. 721-731
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
- and C-Fibers Innervating the Plantar
Rat Hindpaw One Day After an Incision
1Department of Anesthesia and 2Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
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ABSTRACT |
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Pogatzki, Esther M.,
G.
F. Gebhart, and
Timothy J. Brennan.
Characterization of A
- and C-Fibers Innervating the Plantar
Rat Hindpaw One Day After an Incision.
J. Neurophysiol. 87: 721-731, 2002.
Primary hyperalgesia after
tissue injury is suggested to result from sensitization of primary
afferent fibers, but sensitization to mechanical stimuli has been
difficult to demonstrate. In the companion study, sensitization of
mechano-responsive A
- and C-fibers did not explain pain behaviors 45 min after an incision in the rat hindpaw. In the present study, we
examined mechanical response properties of A
- and C-fibers
innervating the glabrous skin of the plantar hindpaw in rats 1 day
after an incision or sham procedure. In behavioral experiments, median
withdrawal thresholds to von Frey filaments were reduced from 522 mN
before to 61 mN 2 and 20 h after incision; median withdrawal
thresholds after sham procedure were stable (522 mN). Responses to a
nonpunctate mechanical stimulus were increased after incision. In
neurophysiological experiments in these same rats, 67 single afferent
fibers were characterized from the left tibial nerve 1 day after sham
procedure (n = 39) or incision (n = 28); electrical stimulation was used as the search stimulus to identify
a representative population of A
- and C-fibers. In the incision
group, 11 fibers (39%) had spontaneous activity with frequencies
ranging from 0.03 to 39.3 imp/s; none were present in the sham group.
The median response threshold of A
-fibers was less in the incision
(56 mN, n = 13) compared with sham (251 mN,
n = 26) group, mainly because the proportion of
mechanically insensitive afferents (MIAs) was less (8 vs. 54% after
sham procedure). Median C-fiber response thresholds were similar in
incised (28 mN, n = 15) and sham rats (56 mN,
n = 13). Responsiveness to monofilaments was
significantly enhanced in A
-fibers 1 day after incision; stimulus
response functions of C-fibers after incision and after sham procedure
did not differ significantly. Only A
-fibers but not C-fibers
sensitized to the nonpunctate mechanical stimulus. The size of
receptive fields was increased in A
- and C-fibers 1 day after
incision. The results indicate that sensitization of A
- and C-fibers
is apparent 1 day after incision. Because sensitization of afferent
fibers to mechanical stimuli correlated with behavioral results,
sensitization may contribute to the reduced withdrawal threshold after
incision. Spontaneous activity in A
- and C-fibers may account for
nonevoked pain behavior and may also contribute to mechanical
hyperalgesia by amplifying responses centrally.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Hyperalgesia, an increased
response to a noxious stimulus, is a common consequence of tissue
injury and inflammation. Primary hyperalgesia arises at the site of
tissue injury, and responses to both mechanical and thermal stimuli are
typically enhanced (LaMotte et al. 1982
; Raja et
al. 1984
, 1999
; Treede et al.
1992
). The neurophysiological correlate of primary hyperalgesia
is sensitization of primary afferent fibers, represented as an increase
in response to suprathreshold stimuli or a decrease in nociceptive
response threshold (Raja et al. 1999
; Treede et
al. 1992
). This is well-established for primary hyperalgesia to
heat after a variety of tissue injuries (Campbell and Meyer
1983
; LaMotte et al. 1982
, 1983
;
Meyer and Campbell 1981
). Because sensitization of
afferent fibers to mechanical stimuli has been difficult to
demonstrate, others have suggested that central sensitization may play
a role in primary mechanical hyperalgesia. In the majority of
electrophysiological studies of mechanosensitive nociceptors, no
changes in response threshold to mechanical stimuli have been noted
(Baumann et al. 1991
; Campbell et al.
1979
; Schmelz et al. 1996
; Thalhammer and
LaMotte 1982
; Treede et al. 1992
). Likewise, the
majority of mechanosensitive afferent fibers investigated in the
preceding study (Hämäläinen et al.
2002
) did not sensitize 45 min after an incision was made in
their receptive field (RF).
It was noted, however, that some afferent fibers with very high
response thresholds before the experimental incision reduced their
response threshold and expanded their RFs 1 h after the incision
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
). It was
suggested that these fibers, termed mechano-insensitive afferents
(MIAs) (Handwerker et al. 1991
; Meyer et al.
1991
), likely contribute to mechanical hyperalgesia. This
corresponds with recent studies demonstrating that MIAs have the
capability to become responsive to mechanical stimuli under conditions
of inflammation (Davis et al. 1993
; Handwerker et
al. 1991
; Kress et al. 1992
; Neugebauer
et al. 1989
). Further investigations support the suggestion
that MIAs may play a role in inflammation-induced mechanical
hyperalgesia (Schmelz et al. 1996
; Schmidt et al.
2000
).
The contribution of MIAs to mechanical hyperalgesia caused by an
incision is still not clear. In the preceding study, only some MIAs
sensitized after incision and the reduction in response threshold of
individual MIAs was not great (Hämäläinen et
al. 2002
). The experimental injury, a surgical incision in the
plantar aspect of the rat hindpaw, leads to a remarkable reduction in paw withdrawal threshold to mechanical stimuli for several days, representing mechanical hyperalgesia (Brennan et al.
1996
). Pain behaviors in these rats and the time course of
mechanical hyperalgesia have similarities to patients' pain reports in
the postoperative period (Tverskoy et al. 1994
).
In the present study, we further examined mechanisms that contribute to
primary mechanical hyperalgesia in the postoperative period. Pain
behaviors and response properties of single afferent fibers to
mechanical stimuli were studied in rats 1 day after an incision or sham
procedure. An electrical search stimulus was used to identify a
representative population of afferent fibers innervating the incision
site at the plantar aspect of the hindpaw. This strategy reduces bias
(relative to a "natural" search stimulus such as tapping) with
regard to response threshold and thus relative contributions of
mechanosensitive afferents and MIAs to mechanical hyperalgesia 1 day
after an incision. Portions of these data have been reported in
abstract form (Pogatzki et al. 2000
).
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METHODS |
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General
All experiments were reviewed and approved by The University of
Iowa animal care and use committee. Rats were treated in accordance with the Ethical Guidelines for Investigations of Experimental Pain in
Conscious Animals as issued by the International Association for the
Study of Pain (Zimmermann 1983
).
Forty-one adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-350 g, Harlan, Indianapolis, IN) were used. Rats were housed individually; food and water were available ad libitum. Neurophysiological experiments were performed in the same rats after behavioral testing. At the end of the protocol, all rats were killed with an overdose of pentobarbital sodium.
Plantar incision
An incision was made under 1.5-2% halothane anesthesia
delivered via a nose cone similar to that described previously
(Brennan et al. 1996
). Briefly, the plantar aspect of
the left hindpaw was prepared, and a 1-cm longitudinal incision through
skin, fascia, and muscle was made. In the present study, incision was
started 12 mm distal from the edge of the heel (see Fig.
1). The skin was
closed with two 5-0 nylon sutures, and the wound was covered with
antibiotic ointment. Control rats underwent a sham procedure that
included halothane anesthesia, sterile preparation of the plantar area,
and topical antibiotics, but they received no incision.
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Pain behaviors
Behavioral tests were undertaken to establish the magnitude of
mechanical hyperalgesia 2 h and 1 day after plantar incision. To
assess baseline pain behavior, rats were placed individually on an
elevated plastic mesh floor covered with a clear plastic cage top
(21 × 27 × 15 cm) and allowed to acclimate. All rats were
pretested for response to a nonpunctate mechanical stimulus (plastic
disk) and withdrawal threshold to von Frey filaments as described
previously (Brennan et al. 1996
). Briefly, withdrawal to
punctate stimulation was tested by applying calibrated nylon von Frey
monofilaments (Stoelting, Wood Dale, IL) to an area adjacent to the
intended incision (Fig. 1). Each von Frey filament (15, 30, 42, 65, 73, 98, 149, and 265 mN) was applied once beginning with 15 mN until a
withdrawal response occurred. The lowest force from three tests
producing a response was considered the withdrawal threshold; if there
was no paw withdrawal, 522 mN was recorded.
The nonpunctate mechanical stimulus, a 5-mm clear plastic disk attached to a von Frey filament (bending force 400 mN), was applied directly on the intended incision site (Fig. 1). A positive response was defined as a withdrawal (flinch) or a passive lifting of the foot without bending the filament; response frequency was calculated from three repeated tests. After assessing baseline pain behaviors, an incision or sham procedure was made; pain behavior was tested 2 and 20 h later.
Electrophysiological studies
The same rats assessed for pain behavior after an incision or
sham procedure were studied in electrophysiological experiments. Twenty-four hours after incision or sham procedure, anesthesia was
induced by an intraperitoneal injection of pentobarbital (Nembutal; 50 mg/kg). The surgical preparation was made as described in the companion
article (Hämäläinen et al. 2002
).
Briefly, the internal jugular vein, the common carotid artery, and the
trachea were cannulated; rats were artificially ventilated, and
experiments were terminated if mean arterial blood pressure fell below
90 mmHg. Body temperature was recorded with a probe placed on the right
foot of the rat; normothermia was maintained by an underbody heating
pad and overhead lamp with feedback control.
For single-fiber recordings from the left tibial nerve, the sciatic
nerve was exposed and a pool for warm mineral oil was made. The tibial
nerve was detached from the sural and peroneal nerves, and all were cut
proximal. Afferent fibers were identified in fine filaments teased from
the distal tibial nerve that was in continuity with the hindpaw. Two
needle electrodes were inserted subcutaneously 9 mm proximal and distal
to the incision site; electrical stimulation (10- to 100-V and 0.5- to
1-ms pulses) was used to search for afferent fibers with a RF adjacent
to the plantar incision. We limited the study to afferent fibers with a
RF at least 4-5 mm from a stimulation electrode. Because the RFs of
primary afferent fibers in the rat are reported to not increase more
than 5 mm after mechanical injury or inflammation (Andrew and
Greenspan 1999
; Reeh et al. 1987
), it is
unlikely that afferent fibers recorded in the present study were
sensitized by insertion of needle electrodes. The placement of needle
electrodes after the sham procedure was the same.
The nerve filament was subdivided until a single action potential was discriminated. Conduction velocity (CV) of an individual fiber was calculated from the response latency determined using a stimulus strength just above threshold. At the end of the experiment, the distance from the cathode to the recording electrode was measured and used to calculate CV.
Nerve activity was amplified, filtered, and displayed on a digital oscilloscope. Spike shape was continuously monitored by analog delay; single-unit action potentials were discriminated, and peristimulus time histograms (PSTHs, 1-s binwidth) were created via a data acquisition system (spike2/CED1401 program). All data were also recorded and stored on video tape.
Characterization of afferent fibers
Response properties of single afferent fibers with RFs on the plantar aspect of the left midfoot were recorded in rats 24 h after incision or sham procedure. When more than one afferent fiber was studied in a rat, the RFs of fibers did not overlap. In general, tapping of the foot and mechanical testing was kept to a minimum to avoid tissue damage and potential sensitization of afferent fibers.
Afferent fibers were classified as A
- or C-fibers if their CV was
between 2.5 and 30 m/s or less than 2.5 m/s, respectively; faster
conducting fibers (A
-fibers) were not studied. Ongoing spontaneous
activity was recorded for each fiber over a 5-min period and averaged.
An afferent fiber with a mean activity >0.1 Hz (a minimum of 30 imp
during the 5-min period recorded to assess spontaneous activity) was
considered spontaneously active.
To characterize mechanical response properties, a brush (number 4 camel's hair artist's brush) and the plastic disk was applied once to the RF. The the plastic disks were applied for 2-3 s. The brush stimulus was applied for 2-3 s by stroking vertically at the hindpaw. Subsequently, calibrated von Frey filaments (2, 6, 10, 16, 29, 56, 78, 92, 110, 147, and 262 mN) were applied in ascending order to the low-threshold area of the RF; each filament was applied once for 3 s. The interstimulus interval was 10-20 s. Using 1-s binwidth, the peak activity of the fiber was the greatest rate during application of the stimulus.
The mechanical response threshold of each fiber was defined as the lowest force that caused either activation of the fiber if no spontaneous activity was present or an increase in fiber activity by at least 2 SDs above mean spontaneous activity. The next strength filament must also have excited the fiber. If a fiber did not respond to the 262-mN filament, a filament with a force of 608 mN was applied. Some fibers did not respond to any von Frey filament, in which case a pinch stimulus (a small curved forceps) was applied, and 608 mN was designated the response threshold.
To generate a stimulus response function (SRF), peak activity (imp/s)
during application of von Frey filaments was plotted versus the force
of each filament. For comparison of SRFs between the sham and incision
group, maximum responses of A
-fibers and of C-fibers were averaged.
Similarly, maximum responses to the blunt probe were compared for A
-
and C-fibers in sham and incised rats.
The mechanical RF was mapped using a von Frey filament with a bending
force approximately twice the individual response threshold. The RF was
drawn on a diagram of the plantar hindpaw, and the area was estimated
by measuring the length and width of the RF on the drawing. No detailed
mapping of RFs was made for fibers with response thresholds
262 mN
because this would have required repeated application of the 608-mN
filament, which could contribute to sensitization independent of the incision.
Statistical analysis
Behavioral data were compared using nonparametric tests;
Friedman's test for within-group and the Kruskal-Wallis test and Mann-Whitney rank-sum test for between-group comparisons were used
(Siegel and Castellan 1988
).
To compare mechanical response properties of afferent fibers assessed
in rats 1 day after incision and rats 1 day after sham procedure, a
two-way ANOVA for repeated measurements and an unpaired t-test was used. Nonparametric analyses
(
2 test, Mann-Whitney test, and Wilcoxon
matched pair test) were used where appropriate. All results are
expressed as median or means ± SE when appropriate.
P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
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RESULTS |
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Behavioral experiments
In 27 rats, the median withdrawal threshold to von Frey filaments did not change after sham procedure (Fig. 1A). Mechanical hyperalgesia to von Frey filaments was apparent only after a plantar incision (n = 14). The median withdrawal threshold decreased from 522 mN before to 61 mN 2 h and 61 mN 20 h after incision (Fig. 1B, P < 0.05 vs. Pre and vs. Sham). In the same rats, responses to the blunt probe (plastic disk) increased from 0% before to 75 ± 6% (mean ± SE) and 62 ± 7% 2 h and 20 h after incision, respectively (Fig. 1C, P < 0.05 vs. Pre and vs. Sham).
Electrophysiological studies
SAMPLE.
Sixty-seven afferent fibers were identified and characterized from the
left tibial nerve of 41 rats; 39 were A
-fibers and 28 were C-fibers.
Thirty-nine fibers (26 A
- and 13 C-fibers) were studied 1 day after
the sham procedure; 28 fibers (13 A
- and 15 C-fibers) were studied 1 day after plantar incision (Table 1). In
17 rats (9 in the sham and 8 in the incision group), more than one
afferent fiber was studied. Mean CVs for A
- and C-fibers did not
differ between sham and incision groups (Table 1).
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SPONTANEOUS ACTIVITY.
None of 39 fibers in the sham group had spontaneous activity, whereas
11 of 28 fibers (39%) in the incision group (P < 0.05) were spontaneously active (Table 1). Spontaneous activity was stable over the entire recording period, which usually lasted 50-60
min. No afferent fibers developed spontaneous activity during testing.
Both A
- and C-fibers in incised rats exhibited spontaneous activity.
An example of a spontaneously active C-fiber with a high rate of
activity is shown in Fig. 2A;
an example of an A
-fiber with a low rate of activity (studied in
another rat) is shown in Fig. 2B. Five of the 11 fibers that
were spontaneously active 1 day after incision exhibited modest
increases in activity (<3 imp/s), whereas 6 fiber had mean rates >15
imp/s (Fig. 2C).
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MECHANICAL RESPONSE PROPERTIES.
Qualitative response properties of nociceptors studied in
sham and incision groups did not differ; that is, none of the A
- or
C-fibers responded to the brush stimulus or to punctate von Frey
filaments <6 mN.
-
and C-fibers studied 1 day after the sham procedure or incision is
shown in Figs. 3 and
4. There was a significant reduction in
the median response threshold of A
-fibers in the incision group
(P < 0.05, Fig. 3B), and this is clear from
inspection of the distribution illustrated in Fig. 3A. In
the sham group, 14 of the 26 A
-fibers (54%) responded only to
punctate stimuli
262 mN (including 5 fibers that responded only to
pinch and assigned a response threshold of 608 mN). In the incision
group, in contrast, only 1 of 13 A
-fibers (8%) responded to
punctate stimuli
262 mN (Fig. 3A).
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-fibers (14) in their respective sham groups with response thresholds
262 mN. This is reflected in the median response
thresholds of these fibers (251 mN for A
-fibers, 56 mN for
C-fibers). Thus, although inspection of Fig. 4A suggests a
modest shift in the distribution of individual response thresholds of
C-fibers in the incision group, reduction of the median response
threshold of C-fibers to 28 mN after an incision was not significant
(Fig. 4B).
Response magnitude.
Increases in peak responses of both A
- and C-fibers in sham and
incision groups were apparent as stimulus intensity was increased. Examples of stimulus-response functions of A
-fibers following the
sham procedure or an incision are shown in Fig.
5; summary data are given in Fig.
6. Mean stimulus-response functions of A
- but not C-fibers in the incision groups differed significantly from their corresponding sham groups; peak responses after incision were significantly greater in A
-fibers (Fig. 6, F = 4.47, P < 0.05) but not C-fibers (F = 3.65, P = 0.07).
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|
- and C-fibers
are shown in Fig. 7, A and
B, respectively. The mean estimated RF size of A
-fibers
(Fig. 7C) was greater (P < 0.05)
in incised rats (120.8 ± 34.5 mm2) relative
to the complementary sham group (13.5 ± 34.0 mm2). Similarly, the mean estimated RF of
C-fibers was greater (P < 0.05) in incised than sham
rats (167.8 ± 17.9 mm2 vs. 33.5 ± 8.69 mm2, respectively; Fig. 7D).
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-fibers were activated by the plastic
disk, whereas a greater proportion (P < 0.05) of
A
-fibers in incised rats (9 of 13 fibers, 69%) responded to this
stimulus (Table 1). The proportion of C-fibers responding to the blunt probe in incised rats (12 of 15 fibers, 88%) was not different from in
sham rats (7 of 13, 54%). For A
-fibers, the peak response to the
blunt mechanical stimulus was greater in the incision compared with the
sham group (P < 0.05); responsiveness to this
nonpunctate stimulus was not significantly different for C-fibers after
an incision (Fig. 8).
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DISCUSSION |
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A
- and C-fibers were activated and sensitized to mechanical
stimuli 1 day after incision; spontaneous activity and RF size were
increased. In incised rats, the mechanical response threshold was
reduced in A
-fibers, and responsiveness to punctate mechanical stimuli was greater relative to control rats. More A
-fibers were responsive to the blunt mechanical stimulus, and responsiveness was
increased after incision.
Methodology
The population of afferent fibers studied in the sham group in the
current study differs from the population of control afferents in the
companion paper (Hämäläinen et al.
2002
). In the latter study, the control afferents were recorded
from rats that had pentobarbital anesthesia and no incision made. In
the current paper, afferents from the sham group had halothane
anesthesia, antibiotics, and preparation of the hindpaw the day before
recording and pentobarbital anesthesia the next day. It is unlikely
that there is any effect of halothane anesthesia, sterile preparation and antibiotics on the afferents 24 h later. Behaviors do not change before and after (Fig. 1) a sham procedure (Zahn and
Brennan 1999
). Pentobarbital is routinely used for recording of
primary afferents. Therefore the difference in the populations of the afferents between the control groups in these two studies is likely related to the search criteria (see following text).
Spontaneous activity in A
- and C-fibers 1 day after incision
In agreement with others, spontaneous activity was not present in
any cutaneous A
- or C-fibers in control rats (Ahlgren et al.
1992
; Andrew and Greenspan 1999
; Hylden
et al. 1989
). Persistent, sustained spontaneous activity
occurred in 38% of A
- and 40% of C-fibers 1 day after incision,
indicating that individual fibers have different capacities to be
spontaneously activated following the incision. A similar proportion of
spontaneously active fibers has been reported after induction of
inflammation (Ahlgren et al. 1992
; Kocher et al.
1987
).
Although spontaneous activity in afferent fibers has been reported
after a variety of tissue injuries and under inflammatory conditions,
it is not a consistent finding. In general, two types of preparations
are used to study activation and sensitization of afferent fibers after
injury. Population studies compare properties of afferent fibers in a
group of animals after tissue injury or inflammation with the
properties of fibers in uninjured control animals. In the majority of
these studies, a greater proportion of spontaneously active fibers has
been reported relative to controls (Ali et al. 1999
;
Andrew and Greenspan 1999
; Baik-Han et al.
1990
; Han et al. 2000
; Hylden et al.
1989
; Kajander and Bennett 1992
; Kocher
et al. 1987
; Michaelis et al. 1995
). In acute
preparations, the nerve is first transected, activity and response
properties characterized, and then the RF injury occurs. Activity and
responses of the afferents after injury are compared with preinjury
responses. Under these conditions, spontaneous activity in afferent
fibers was not evident after incision
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
) or did not
persist longer than 1-2 h after mechanical injury (Reeh et al.
1987
) or induction of cutaneous inflammation (Randich et al. 1997
).
The inconsistency between acute preparations and population studies may
be related to the time recordings were made after injury. Sustained
spontaneous activity in afferent fibers after incision may require
several hours to develop. In the companion paper, recording time after
incision was limited to 1-2 h; this could explain why spontaneous
activity was not observed. Joint afferents developed spontaneous
activity 2-3 h after injection of koalin-carageenan (Schaible
and Schmidt 1988
). Similarly, spontaneous activity was rare
within the first 6 h after axotomy (Liu et al. 2000
; Michaelis et al. 1995
).
However, a delay in development of spontaneous activity in afferent
fibers for several hours is not consistent with the appearance of pain
behavior as early as 15 min after incision (unpublished observation)
and spontaneous activity in dorsal horn neurons 1 h after
incision. In our companion paper, the nerve supplying the injured
tissue is cut distal to the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) before
recordings are started. In the present study 1 day after incision, the
nerve supplying the injured tissue is in continuum with the spinal cord
during incision and for the next 24 h. Perhaps an intact axonal
connection to the spinal cord is required for the generation of
spontaneous activity in afferents after incision. For example, dorsal
root reflexes (DRRs) that promote neurogenic inflammation could in part
enhance peripheral sensitization (Cervero et al. 2000
;
Lin et al. 1999
; Willis 1999
). Nerve
transsection distal to the DRG also could disrupt axonal transport of
proteins from the DRG to the distal nerve ending that contribute to the development of spontaneous activity (Devor and Govrin-Lippmann 1983
; Koschorke et al. 1994
).
Contribution of spontaneous activity to pain behavior after plantar incision
Spontaneous pain behaviors have been defined in particular animal
models of pain and correlated with ongoing activity of primary afferent
fibers (Han et al. 2000
; McCall et al.
1996
; Puig and Sorkin 1996
). After plantar
incision, no tonic pain behavior occurs after incision like the
licking, biting, and flinching behaviors caused by formalin injection.
We have characterized nonevoked pain behavior based on weight bearing
on the incised hindpaw (Brennan et al. 1996
; Zahn
et al. 1998
); rats had increased pain scores for several days
after plantar incision. The spontaneous discharge in A
- and C-fibers
may contribute to nonevoked pain behaviors described for the same
incision. In the present study, the majority of spontaneously active
A
- and C-fibers had activity greater than 15 Hz after incision.
Perhaps licking, biting, and flinching do not occur because the
proportion of A
- and C-fibers activated by formalin is greater
(McCall et al. 1996
; Puig and Sorkin
1996
).
Sensitization to mechanical stimuli
In the present study, A
-fibers had lower response thresholds in
incised rats. As suggested by others, threshold reduction of
mechanosensitive nociceptors may not be a sufficient predictor for
sensitization of afferent fibers (Andrew and Greenspan
1999
; Campbell et al. 1979
, 1988
;
Cooper et al. 1991
; Thalhammer and LaMotte
1982
). Stimulus-response functions evaluate a range of stimuli
and demonstrate, in some studies, mechanical sensitization of
nociceptors (Ahlgren et al. 1997
; Andrew and
Greenspan 1999
; Cooper et al. 1991
;
Tanner et al. 1998
). The peak responses of A
-fibers
to a range of von Frey filaments 1 day after incision was significantly
enhanced in the present study. Increased spontaneous activity was not
subtracted to compare peak afferent firing rates because total
discharge in fibers may be critical for transmission of afferent
information to spinal neurons. Peak responses of C-fibers after
incision tended to be greater compared with controls but were not
significantly different.
In the companion paper, a reduction in response threshold of afferent
fibers 45 min after incision was limited, and, except for RF expansion,
responsiveness to punctate stimuli did not change greatly
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
). The same
mechanisms (e.g., loss of DRRs, loss of axonal transport, and shorter
time after incision) that were suggested to limit the development of
spontaneous activity in the acute preparation may also impair the
development of sensitization to mechanical stimuli. Furthermore, only a
distinct group of afferent fibers may sensitize to mechanical stimuli
after incision, and this group may not have been studied in great
detail in the acute preparation. For example, tapping and applying
pressure to the plantar region were used to identify afferent fibers
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
). This may
have biased selection to mechanosensitive fibers with lower response
thresholds. From work by others, mechanosensitive fibers may be less
likely to reduce response threshold than A
high-threshold
mechanoreceptors (Reeh et al. 1987
). C-fibers did not
reduce their response thresholds regardless of their mechanosensitivity (Reeh et al. 1987
).
Increased responsiveness to the blunt mechanical stimulus occurred in
A
-fibers from incised rats, and more A
-fibers were responsive.
The same mechanism(s) responsible for a sensitization of A
-fibers,
e.g., a reduction in response threshold and increase in responsiveness,
may increase responses to the blunt mechanical stimulus.
RF expansion
One day after incision, the estimated RF areas were increased
approximately ninefold and fivefold in A
- and C-fibers,
respectively. Because the RF area was assessed by applying a filament
with a force approximately twice the response threshold and response thresholds in A
-fibers were less in incised rats, the RF expansion may be relatively underestimated in the incised group. One underlying mechanism for primary afferent RF expansion may be sensitization of
insensitive branches of mechanosensitive fibers (Schmelz et al.
1994
, 1996
). RFs of fibers studied in incised
rats may have expanded into the incision that was made in less
responsive afferent branches.
The percentage RF expansion was greater 1 day after incision compared
with what was found 45 min after incision
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
). Again, the
mechanisms discussed above may explain these differences. Also, this
disparity may be a result of the placement of the incision as near as
possible to the low-threshold site of the primary afferent RF
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
). The RF
expansion may be less when the injury occurs at the most sensitive area
rather than outside to the most sensitive area because silent branches
of the afferents may not be injured when the incision is placed
adjacent to the most sensitive area (Thalhammer and LaMotte
1982
; Treede et al. 1992
).
MIAs
In the present study, electrical stimulation was used to search
for fibers. As a result, a significantly greater proportion of fibers
with very high mechanical response thresholds was identified in sham
rats (see Fig. 9A, example).
Criteria by others designated fibers that were not activated
mechanically or only by monofilaments
60 bar or 362 mN as MIAs
(Davis et al. 1993
; Handwerker et al. 1991
; Meyer et al. 1991
). Although we did not
separate out MIAs from mechanosensitive afferents in the results, these
fibers can be considered as a separate group based on the criteria from
the companion paper. In sham rats, 54% of A
-fibers meet the
criteria for MIAs (Table 1, Fig. 9B); this is comparable to
the proportion of A
-MIAs in somatic nerves supplying hairy skin in
rats, monkeys, and humans (Kress et al. 1992
;
Meyer et al. 1991
; Schmelz et al. 1996
).
In incised rats, only 8% of A
-fibers were MIAs. Because the same
search stimulus was used in both groups, some mechanosensitive fibers
after incision could have been A
-MIAs that were sensitized after
incision. This suggests that A
-MIAs are important for a reduction in
median response threshold to mechanical stimuli after incision. This is
further supported by a greater number of A
-MIAs that reduced their
response threshold 45 min after incision compared with mechanosensitive
A
-fibers (Hämäläinen et al. 2002
)
and is consistent with results by others (Reeh et al.
1987
). The proportion of C-MIAs did not differ significantly in
the incision and sham groups (Fig. 9C); this is reflected in
a similar median response threshold of C-fibers after incision compared
with sham procedure. As suggested by others (Reeh et al.
1987
), C-fibers may reduce their response threshold less after
injury than A
-fibers.
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Sensitization of A
-MIAs supplying the glabrous skin of the rat may
not be uniform after incision. Only a proportion of MIAs reduced their
response threshold 1 h after incision
(Hämäläinen et al. 2002
); one
A
-fiber studied 1 day after incision met the criteria of a
mechano-insensitive fiber, suggesting that no sensitization occurred.
Only some MIAs supplying the knee joint of the cat (Schaible and
Schmidt 1988
), hairy skin of the rat (Kress et al.
1992
), or hairy skin of the monkey (Davis et al.
1993
) sensitized after application of chemicals or inflammatory
mediators to their RF.
Contribution of mechanical sensitization to pain behavior
Activation and sensitization of primary afferents may explain the
reduced withdrawal thresholds observed behaviorally. First, the
magnitude of the decrease in response threshold of A
-fibers correlated to the reduced withdrawal threshold in rats 1 day after incision compared with controls. A greater proportion of A
-fibers responded to forces
92 mN in incised rats (Fig. 9B); these
filaments produced hindpaw withdrawal in 95% of the incised rats.
Therefore a greater number of A
-fibers will be activated and may
contribute in part to the withdrawal.
Second, enhanced responsiveness of A
-fibers to punctate mechanical
stimuli occurred in incised rats. However, in general, the peak
responses produced by filaments causing withdrawal in incised rats
(gray area in Fig. 5, A and B) were not much
greater than the peak responses produced by the strongest filament in sham rats, which usually did not produce withdrawal (262 mN, horizontal broken line in Fig. 5). Therefore enhanced responsiveness of afferent fibers by itself does not explain the withdrawal in incised rats. Under
inflammatory conditions, an enhanced responsiveness of afferent fibers
to a range of mechanical stimuli was remarkable without a great
reduction in response threshold (Andrew and Greenspan 1999
; Cooper et al. 1991
). However, these
studies did not assess pain behaviors to make a direct comparison of
neurophysiological and behavioral results; enhanced afferent fiber
discharge limited to mechanical stimuli with high intensities may not
contribute to reduced withdrawal thresholds in behavioral experiments
(Andrew and Greenspan 1999
; Cooper et al.
1991
).
Third, expansion of RFs of A
- and C-fibers occurred that may be
important for mechanical hyperalgesia after incision. An increase in RF
size will cause more fibers to be activated by the punctate or
nonpunctate stimulus and produce greater input to dorsal horn neurons.
Sensitization of afferent fibers to mechanical stimuli may only
contribute in part to mechanical hyperalgesia after incision; central
sensitization may also be important. Perhaps spontaneous activity in
afferent fibers, particularly the high-frequency discharge of C-fibers,
may produce sustained depolarization of dorsal horn neurons, and this
may amplify responses to mechanical stimuli (Sandkühler
2000
). Increased background activity and mechanical sensitization of dorsal horn neurons occurs as early as 1 h after incision (Vandermeulen and Brennan 2000
). Nociceptive
specific and wide dynamic range neurons develop background activity,
expanded RFs, and enhanced responses to mechanical stimuli
(Vandermeulen and Brennan 2000
). However, only wide
dynamic range neurons and not nociceptive specific neurons were
activated by the same forces that produced withdrawal in behavioral
experiments after plantar incision. Therefore sensitization of wide
dynamic range neurons may transmit the behavioral responses
(Vandermeulen and Brennan 2000
); the spontaneous
activity in A
- and C-fibers could amplify responses to mechanical
stimuli, including low-threshold mechanoreceptors at the same wide
dynamic range neuron. The spontaneous activity in A
- and C-fibers
could also amplify responses to mechanical stimuli in nociceptive
specific neurons; however, the nociceptive specific neurons may
only sensitize to strong mechanical stimuli greater than 100 mN. These
forces are greater than the withdrawal threshold after incision.
Finally, the nonevoked pain behavior we have observed after incision may not only be pain at rest. Because the scoring is based on weight bearing, there may be a mechanical component to the behavior. Mechanical sensitization of afferent fibers after incision could contribute to decreased weight bearing in an awake and ambulating rat.
Conclusion
The present study demonstrates that peripheral sensitization to
mechanical stimuli contributes to pain behaviors after plantar incision. Sensitization of A
- and C-fibers occurs to the same mechanical stimuli that produce pain behaviors. Both groups of fibers
increased their RF size, permitting more fibers to be activated by a
stimulus. Spontaneous activity in afferents occurs; this may contribute
to nonevoked pain behavior and mechanical hyperalgesia.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We are grateful to S. Birely for excellent secretarial assistance.
This work was supported by the Innovative Medizinische Forschung, University of Muenster, Germany (Po1-6-I,II/98-38) to E. M. Pogatzki and by National Institutes of Health Grants GM-55831 to T. J. Brennan and DA-02879 to G. F. Gebhart.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests: T. J. Brennan, Dept. of Anesthesia, The University of Iowa, College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242-1079 (E-mail: tim-brennan{at}uiowa.edu).
Received 12 March 2001; accepted in final form 16 October 2001.
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REFERENCES |
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