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1.
Magnetic field exposure was consistently found to affect pain inhibition (i.e. analgesia). Recently, we showed that an extreme reduction of the ambient magnetic and electric environment, by mu-metal shielding, also affected stress-induced analgesia (SIA) in C57 mice. Using CD1 mice, we report here the same findings from replication studies performed independently in Pisa, Italy and London, ON, Canada. Also, neither selective vector nulling of the static component of the ambient magnetic field with Helmholtz coils, nor copper shielding of only the ambient electric field, affected SIA in mice. We further show that a pre-stress exposure to the mu-metal box is necessary for the anti-analgesic effects to occur. The differential effects of the two near-zero magnetic conditions may depend on the elimination (obtained only by mu-metal shielding) of the extremely weak time-varying component of the magnetic environment. This would provide the first direct and repeatable evidence for a behavioural and physiological effect of very weak time-varying magnetic fields, suggesting the existence of a very sensitive magnetic discrimination in the endogenous mechanisms that underlie SIA. This has important implications for other reported effects of exposures to very weak magnetic fields and for the theoretical work that considers the mechanisms underlying the biological detection of weak magnetic fields.  相似文献   

2.
1. The terrestrial snail, Cepaea nemoralis, when placed on a warmed surface (40 degrees C) displays a thermal avoidance behaviour that entails an elevation of the anterior portion of the fully extended foot. The latency of this nociceptive response was increased by the prototypical mu and specific kappa opiate agonists, morphine and U-50, 488H, respectively, in a manner indicative of anti-nociception and the induction of 'analgesia'. Pretreatment with the prototypical opiate antagonist, naloxone, blocked the morphine- and reduced the U-50, 488H-induced analgesia. Naloxone had no effects on the thermal response latencies of saline treated animals. 2. Exposure to either cold (7 degrees C) or warm (38 degrees C) temperature stress increased the nociceptive thresholds of Cepaea in a manner indicative of the induction of 'stress-induced analgesia'. The warm stress-induced analgesia was opioid mediated, being blocked by naloxone, whereas, the cold stress-induced analgesia was insensitive to naloxone. 3. Exposure for 15-30 min to 0.5 Hz weak rotating magnetic fields (1.5-8.0 G) significantly reduced the analgesic effects of the mu and kappa opiate agonists in a manner similar to that observed with naloxone. The magnetic stimuli also inhibited the endogenous opioid mediated warm stress-induced analgesia and significantly reduced the cold stress-induced analgesia. The magnetic stimuli had no evident effects on the nociceptive responses of saline-treated animals. The dihydropyridine (DHP) and non-DHP calcium channel antagonists diltiazem, verapamil. and nifedipine differentially and significantly reduced, while the DHP calcium channel agonist, BAY K8644, significantly enhanced the inhibitory effects of the magnetic fields on morphine-induced analgesia.  相似文献   

3.
Adult male mice exposed to a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging (NMRI) procedure during the mid-dark period and injected with morphine (10 mg/kg) failed to exhibit the normal nocturnally enhanced morphine analgesia response to a thermal stimulus that was displayed by mice exposed to a sham imaging procedure and treated with morphine (p less than .01). When tested during the mid-light period, animals exposed to the NMRI procedure and given morphine displayed attenuated analgesia levels relative to sham exposed mice (p less than .01) treated with morphine. However, the morphine induced analgesia was not totally abolished since the imaged mice still exhibited analgesia relative to saline treated mice (p less than .01). These results suggest that the magnetic and/or radio-frequency fields associated with the NMRI procedure alter both day- and night-time responses to morphine. These results may reflect magnetic field induced alterations in neuronal calcium binding and/or alterations in nocturnal pineal gland activity.  相似文献   

4.
Dobner PR 《Peptides》2006,27(10):2405-2414
Neurotensin (NT) can produce a profound analgesia or enhance pain responses, depending on the circumstances. Recent evidence suggests that this may be due to a dose-dependent recruitment of distinct populations of pain modulatory neurons. NT knockout mice display defects in both basal nociceptive responses and stress-induced analgesia. Stress-induced antinociception is absent in these mice and instead stress induces a hyperalgesic response, suggesting that NT plays a key role in the stress-induced suppression of pain. Cold water swim stress results in increased NT mRNA expression in hypothalamic regions known to project to periaqueductal gray, a key region involved in pain modulation. Thus, stress-induced increases in NT signaling in pain modulatory regions may be responsible for the transition from pain facilitation to analgesia. This review focuses on recent advances that have provided insights into the role of NT in pain modulation.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of anxiogenic (pentylentetrazole) and anxiolytic (diazepam) agents on and cold swim stress-induced analgesia were investigated in SHR and NMRI male mice. It was shown that behavioral response to acute stress was associated with a change in the pain tolerance threshold. Diazepam increased immobility time and attenuated stress-induced analgesia (SIA). NMRI mice were more responsive to anxiolytic than the SHR mice, but the lattes manifested more dramatic changes when anxiety was pharmacologically enhanced (immobility time was significantly reduced and the SIA exaggerated). Our findings suggest that the main parameters change in reciprocal manner following a pharmacologically altered anxiety, and reveal that differences between two strains of mice are determined by differences in their sensitivity to stress.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract Biting fly attack induces a variety of stress and anxiety related changes in the physiology and behaviour of the target animals. Significant reductions in pain, or more appropriately, nociceptive sensitivity (latency of a foot-lifting response to an aversive thermal stimulus), are evident in laboratory mice after a 1 h exposure to stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans. The role of the various components of biting fly attack in the development of this stress-induced reduction in pain sensitivity (analgesia) is, however, unclear. This study demonstrates that fly-naive mice do not exhibit a stress-induced analgesia when exposed to stable flies whose biting mouthparts have been removed. In contrast, mice that have been previously exposed to intact stable flies exhibit significant analgesia when exposed to flies that are incapable of biting. However, the level of analgesia induced is lower than that elicited by exposure to intact stable flies. Exposure to non-biting house flies, Musca domestica , has no effect on nociceptive sensitivity. It appears that the actual bite of the stable fly is necessary for the induction of analgesia and probably other stress and anxiety associated responses in fly naive mice. However, mice rapidly learn to recognize biting flies and exhibit significant, possibly anticipatory analgesic responses to the mere presence of biting flies.  相似文献   

7.
M Kavaliers  D Innes 《Peptides》1992,13(3):603-607
There is evidence suggesting that the endogenous mammalian octapeptide FLFQPQRFamide (F8Fa or neuropeptide FF, NPFF) has modulatory effects on opioid-mediated analgesia in rodents. There is also substantial evidence for sex differences in opioid analgesia, whereby male rats and mice display greater levels of opioid-mediated analgesia than females. In the present study, determinations were made of the effects of NPFF and IgG from antiserum against NPFF on morphine- and restraint stress-induced opioid analgesia in male and female deer mice. Intracerebroventricular (ICV) administrations of NPFF (0.10-10 micrograms) reduced in a dose-dependent manner morphine- and stress-induced analgesia in both male and female mice, with NPFF having markedly greater antagonistic effects in the male than female mice. Additionally, ICV administrations of NPFF-IgG increased the levels of morphine- and stress-induced analgesia and significantly reduced basal nociceptive sensitivity in male mice, whereas, in female mice, NPFF-IgG had no significant effects on either opioid-mediated analgesia or nociceptive sensitivity. These results indicate that there are sex differences in the modulatory effects of NPFF on opioid-mediated analgesia.  相似文献   

8.
The influence of forced swimming on the development of stress-induced analgesia was studied in 35 SHR mice, 65 NMRI mice, and 23 white outbred male rats. Mice were subjected to swimming conditions (at a temperature of 11 degrees C) for a period of 4 minutes and rats for 6 minutes. Pain thresholds were measured by a footshock. It was shown that behavioral response to acute stress is associated with a change in the pain tolerance threshold: activity of an animal under test conditions positively correlated with stress-induced analgesia. The response to stress and parameters of stress-induced analgesia depend on the genetic factor and age, however, the correlation between the activity during exposure to stress and the extent of stress-induced analgesia conserves in all cases.  相似文献   

9.
Previous experiments with mice have shown that a repeated 1 h daily exposure to an ambient magnetic field shielded environment induces analgesia (anti-nociception). This shielding reduces ambient static and extremely low frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MF) by approximately 100 times for frequencies below 120 Hz. To determine the threshold of ELF-MF amplitude that would attenuate or abolish this effect, 30 and 120 Hz magnetic fields were introduced into the shielded environment at peak amplitudes of 25, 50, 100 and 500 nT. At 30 Hz, peak amplitudes of 50, 100, and 500 nT attenuated this effect in proportion to the amplitude magnitude. At 120 Hz, significant attenuation was observed at all amplitudes. Exposures at 10, 60, 100, and 240 Hz with peak amplitudes of 500, 300, 500, and 300 nT, respectively, also attenuated the induced analgesia. No exposure abolished this effect except perhaps at 120 Hz, 500 nT. If the peak amplitude frequency product was kept constant at 6000 nT-Hz for frequencies of 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 Hz, the extent of attenuation was constant, indicating that the detection mechanism is dependent on the nT-Hz product. A plot of effect versus the induced current metric nT-Hz suggests a threshold of ELF-MF detection in mice at or below 1000 nT-Hz.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of exposure to clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on analgesia induced by the mu opiate agonist, fentanyl, was examined in mice. During the dark period, adult male mice were exposed for 23.2 min to the time-varying (0.6 T/sec) magnetic field (TVMF) component of the MRI procedure. Following this exposure, the analgesic potency of fentanyl citrate (0.1 mg/kg) was determined at 5, 10, 15, and 30 min post-injection, using a thermal test stimulus (hot-plate 50 degrees C). Exposure to the magnetic-field gradients attenuated the fentanyl-induced analgesia in a manner comparable to that previously observed with morphine. These results indicate that the time-varying magnetic fields associated with MRI have significant inhibitory effects on the analgesic effects of specific mu-opiate-directed ligands.  相似文献   

11.
There is evidence suggesting that the endogenous tetrapeptide, Tyr-MIF-1 (Tyr-Prol-Leu-Gly-amide), has antagonistic or modulatory effects on opioid-mediated analgesia. There is also substantial evidence for sex differences in opioid effects, whereby male rodents display greater levels of opioid-mediated analgesia than females. In the present study, determinations were made of the effects of Tyr-MIF-1 on morphine- and restraint stress-induced opioid analgesia in adult male and female deer mice, Peromyscus maniculatus. Intraperitoneal treatment with Tyr-MIF-1 (0.10–10 mg/kg) reduced morphine- and stress-induced analgesia in both male and female mice, with Tyr-MIF-1 having markedly greater antagonistic effects in male than female mice. These results indicate that there are sex differences in the modulatory (antiopiate) effects of Tyr-MIF-1 on opioid-mediated analgesia.  相似文献   

12.
The comparison of two measurements of the pigeon threshold for electrical stimuli, performed 2 h apart, reveals stress-induced analgesia as a result of stressful manipulations between the two tests. When pigeons are exposed to a weak, oscillating magnetic field between the two measurements, the analgesic response is inhibited and a hyperalgesic effect is recorded. The present findings are in agreement with previous studies showing that magnetic treatments may alter pigeons' emotional state and some of their behavioral patterns. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
This paper has two aims. First, it reports the findings of a study on the effects of low-frequency magnetic fields on reproduction. Second, it serves as an example of an attempt to replicate the results of an experimental study in an independent laboratory and discusses some of the problems of replication studies. To try to replicate the findings of a study reporting increased resorptions (fetal loss) in mice exposed to 20 kHz magnetic fields with sawtooth waveform and to study the possible effects of 50 Hz sinusoidal fields, pregnant mice were exposed to magnetic fields from day 0 to 18 of pregnancy, 24 h per day. The flux densities of the vertical magnetic fields were 15 μT (peak-to-peak) at 20 kHz and 13 or 130 μT (root mean square) at 50 Hz. Two strains of animals were used: CBA/S mice imported from the laboratory reporting the original observations, and a closely related strain CBA/Ca. The CBA/S mice were cleaned of pathogenic microbes and parasites before they were imported into our laboratory. The magnetic field exposures did not affect resorption rate in CBA/Ca mice. In CBA/S, the frequency of resorptions was higher in the exposed mice than in the control group. However, the increase was not significantly different from either the no-effect hypothesis or the results of the original study we were attempting to replicate. Differences between the two studies and difficulties in interpreting the results are discussed. It is concluded that the results tend more to support than argue against increased resorptions in CBA/S mice exposed to the 20 kHz magnetic field. The results demonstrate that animal strain is an important variable in bioelectromagnetics research: even closely related strains may show different responses to magnetic field exposure. Bioelectromagnetics 18:410–417, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Mice receiving daily injection of morphine (10 mg/kg) developed tolerance to morphine-induced analgesia, such that after 5–7 days of treatment their thermal response (paw licking) latencies in the hot plate test were indistinguishable from those of control animals. Exposure to a rotating magnetic field for thirty minutes before the daily morphine administrations significantly reduced the development of tolerance. These magnetic exposure also significantly increased over 7–10 days the basal nociceptive thresholds and paw licking response latencies of saline treated mice. Control and sham exposed mice that were fully tolerant to the analgesic effects of morphine failed to show any tolerance to morphine-induced analgesia when exposed to the magnetic stimuli prior to injection. Likewise, the partial tolerance to morphine shown by mice exposed to the rotating magnetic field pre-injection environmental cues was eliminated when control or sham pre-injection cues lacking the magnetic stimuli were provided. In all cases tolerance to morphine-induced analgesia was evident in the subsequent re-test with the original cues. These results indicate that magnetic field exposure can reduce the development of tolerance to the analgesic effects of morphine. They also show that magnetic stimuli function as significant environmental cues for the development of tolerance to morphine-induced analgesia. This suggests that magnetic stimuli affect both the associative (classical conditioning) and non-associative (physiological, pharmacological) mechanisms involved in the development of opiate tolerance.  相似文献   

15.
Biting flies influence both physiology and behaviour of domestic and wild animals. This study demonstrates that brief (30 min) exposure of male and female mice to stable flies leads to significant increases in nociceptive responses, indicative of the induction of analgesia. The biting fly-induced analgesia was mediated by endogenous opioid systems as it was blocked by the prototypic opiate antagonist naloxone. Exposure for 30 min to the bedding of biting fly-exposed mice also induced significant opioid mediated analgesic responses in mice. Exposure to either house flies or the bedding of house fly-exposed mice had no significant effects on nociception. These results indicate that brief exposure to either stable flies, or to olfactory cues associated with mice exposed to stable flies, activates endogenous opioid systems leading to the induction of analgesia and likely other opioid mediated behavioural and physiological stress responses. These results suggest the involvement of endogenous opioid systems in the mediation of the behavioural and physiological consequences of biting fly exposure in domestic and wild animals.  相似文献   

16.
There is a qualitative sex difference in the neurochemical mediation of stress-induced and kappa-opioid analgesia; these phenomena are dependent on N-methyl-d-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors in males but not females. Progesterone modulation of this sex difference was examined in mice. Analgesia against thermal nociception was produced by forced cold water swim or by systemic administration of the kappa-opioid agonist, U50,488. As seen previously, the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 blocked both forms of analgesia in male but not female mice. Also as in previous studies, this sex difference was found to be dependent on ovarian hormones such that ovariectomy induced female mice to "switch" to the male-like, NMDAergic system. We now demonstrate that a single injection of progesterone (50 microg), systemically administered 30 min before analgesia assessment, is sufficient to restore female-specific mediation of analgesia (i.e., insensitivity to MK-801 blockade) in ovariectomized female mice. The rapidity of this neurochemical "switching" action of progesterone suggests mediation via cell surface receptors or the action of neuroactive steroid metabolites of progesterone.  相似文献   

17.
When comparing magnitudes of "behavioural despair" (duration of immobility) and stress-induced analgesia in the tail suspension test and cold water swim test with SHR and NMRI male mice. The results might depend on saline injection prior the test and on the fact that exposure to cold water in swim test was sufficient to alter the response patterns. The findings show that the main parameters are closely related to each other. Stress-induced analgesia seems to be a measure of stress as the stress becomes stronger analgesia changes in linear dependence, whereas duration of immobility has an invert U-shaped function.  相似文献   

18.
R Greenberg  E H O'Keefe 《Life sciences》1982,31(12-13):1185-1188
Experiments were done to examine the analgesic effect of thiorphan alone or in combination with stress in mice. Analgesia was assessed by measuring jump latencies from a 55 degrees C hot plate. Thiorphan exhibited weak analgesic properties evidenced by significant increases in jump latencies only after 300 mg/kg i.p. Additional experiments were done to see the effect of i.c.v. administration of thiorphan in the mouse hot plate test. Control experiments revealed that either i.c.v. saline or sham caused naloxone reversible analgesia which was potentiated by thiorphan (100 mg/kg i.p.). Immobilization stress-induced analgesia was also potentiated by thiorphan (100 mg/kg i.p.) and antagonized by naloxone (10 mg/kg i.p.). The results suggest that stress-induced analgesia in the mouse is associated with an endogenous opioid mechanism which is potentiated when enkephalin degradation is inhibited by thiorphan.  相似文献   

19.
We investigated the comparative effects of 4 and 60 Hz magnetic fields on pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-induced seizure in mice. For this study, we measured the latent time to seizure, seizure duration, and lethality induced by PTZ in mice exposed to 4 and 60 Hz magnetic fields (MF) for 30 min. Compared to sham-exposed controls, the latent time to tail twitching and seizure in the 4 Hz MF group was significantly decreased while the latent time to seizure in the 60 Hz MF group was significantly increased. The seizure duration in the 4 Hz MF group was significantly decreased while that in the 60 Hz MF group was significantly increased. More importantly, while the mice exposed to a 60 Hz MF experienced significantly increased lethality after seizure convulsion, those exposed to a 4 Hz MF showed no lethality, with a shortening of the duration of seizure. This beneficial effect of a 4 Hz MF on seizure has the same implication as the anti-oxidative effects of a 4 Hz MF observed in our previous work. The results of our current and previous works indicate that a 4 Hz MF may be used as a therapeutic physical agent for the treatment of oxidative stress-induced diseases, including seizure, with or without chemical drugs.  相似文献   

20.
Life time prevalence of major depression disorder (MDD) is higher in women compared to men especially during the period surrounding childbirth. Women suffering from MDD during pregnancy use antidepressant medications, particularly Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI). These drugs readily cross the placental barrier and impact the developing fetal brain. The present study assessed the effects of prenatal exposure to fluoxetine (FLX), an SSRI antidepressant drug, on corticosterone and behavioral responses to stress in female mice. In young females, prenatal FLX significantly elevated corticosterone response to continuous stress. In adults, prenatal FLX augmented corticosterone response to acute stress and suppressed the response to continuous stress. Additionally, prenatal FLX significantly augmented stress-induced increase in locomotion and reduced anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors in adult, but not young mice. The dexamethasone suppression test revealed that prenatal FLX induced a state of glucocorticoid resistance in adult females, indicating that the negative feedback control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis response to stress was disrupted. These findings provide the first indication of altered hormonal and behavioral responses to continuous stress and suggest a role for the development of glucocorticoid resistance in these effects. According to these findings, prenatal environment may have implications for stress sensitivity and responsiveness to life challenges. Furthermore, this study may assist in understanding the limitations and precautions that should be taken in the use of SSRIs during pregnancy.  相似文献   

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