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Spinal Autofluorescent Flavoprotein Imaging in a Rat Model of Nerve Injury-Induced Pain and the Effect of Spinal Cord Stimulation
Authors:Joost L. M. Jongen  Helwin Smits  Tiziana Pederzani  Malik Bechakra  Mehdi Hossaini  Sebastiaan K. Koekkoek  Frank J. P. M. Huygen  Chris I. De Zeeuw  Jan C. Holstege  Elbert A. J. Joosten
Affiliation:1. Dept. of Neurology, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.; 2. Pain Management and Research Center, UMC+, Maastricht, the Netherlands.; 3. Dept. of Neuroscience, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.; 4. Dept. of Pain Medicine, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.; 5. Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Royal Academy for Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.; University of South California, United States of America,
Abstract:Nerve injury may cause neuropathic pain, which involves hyperexcitability of spinal dorsal horn neurons. The mechanisms of action of spinal cord stimulation (SCS), an established treatment for intractable neuropathic pain, are only partially understood. We used Autofluorescent Flavoprotein Imaging (AFI) to study changes in spinal dorsal horn metabolic activity. In the Seltzer model of nerve-injury induced pain, hypersensitivity was confirmed using the von Frey and hotplate test. 14 Days after nerve-injury, rats were anesthetized, a bipolar electrode was placed around the affected sciatic nerve and the spinal cord was exposed by a laminectomy at T13. AFI recordings were obtained in neuropathic rats and a control group of naïve rats following 10 seconds of electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve at C-fiber strength, or following non-noxious palpation. Neuropathic rats were then treated with 30 minutes of SCS or sham stimulation and AFI recordings were obtained for up to 60 minutes after cessation of SCS/sham. Although AFI responses to noxious electrical stimulation were similar in neuropathic and naïve rats, only neuropathic rats demonstrated an AFI-response to palpation. Secondly, an immediate, short-lasting, but strong reduction in AFI intensity and area of excitation occurred following SCS, but not following sham stimulation. Our data confirm that AFI can be used to directly visualize changes in spinal metabolic activity following nerve injury and they imply that SCS acts through rapid modulation of nociceptive processing at the spinal level.
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