Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/7237
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Type: Journal article
Title: Effect of lumbar 5 ventral root transection on pain behaviours: A novel rat model for neuropathic pain without axotomy of primary sensory neurons
Author: Li, L.
Xian, C.
Zhong, J.
Zhou, X.
Citation: Experimental Neurology, 2002; 175(1):23-34
Publisher: Academic Press Inc
Issue Date: 2002
ISSN: 0014-4886
1090-2430
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Li Li, Cory J Xian, Jin-Hua Zhong, Xin-Fu Zhou
Abstract: A peripheral nerve injury often causes neuropathic pain but the underlying mechanisms remain obscure. Several established animal models of peripheral neuropathic pain have greatly advanced our understanding of the diverse mechanisms of neuropathic pain. A common feature of these models is primary sensory neuron injury and the commingle of intact axons with degenerating axons in the sciatic nerve. Here we investigated whether neuropathic pain could be induced without sensory neuron injury following exposure of their peripheral axons to the milieu of Wallerian degeneration. We developed a unilateral lumbar 5 ventral root transection (L5 VRT) model in adult rats, in which L5 ventral root fibers entering the sciatic nerve were sectioned in the spinal canal. This model differs from previous ones in that DRG neurons and their afferents are kept uninjured and intact afferents expose to products of degenerating efferent ventral root fibers in the sciatic nerve and the denervated muscles. We found that the L5 VRT produced rapid (24 h after transection), robust and prolonged (56 days) bilateral mechanical allodynia, to a similar extent to that in rats with L5 spinal nerve transection (L5 SNT), cold allodynia and short-term thermal hyperalgesia (14 days). Furthermore, L5 VRT led to significant inflammation as demonstrated by infiltration of ED-1-positive monocytes/macrophages in the DRG, sciatic nerve and muscle fibers. These findings demonstrated that L5 VRT produced behavioral signs of neuropathic pain with high mechanical sensitivity and thermal responsiveness, and suggested that neuropathic pain can be induced without damage to sensory neurons. We propose that neuropathic pain in this model may be mediated by primed intact sensory neurons, which run through the milieu of Wallerian degeneration and inflammation after nerve injury. The L5 VRT model manifests the complex regional pain syndrome in some human patients, and it may provide an additional dimension to dissect out the mechanisms underlying neuropathic pain.
Keywords: Lumbosacral Region
Ganglia, Spinal
Neurons, Afferent
Motor Neurons
Spinal Nerve Roots
Monocytes
Macrophages
Animals
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Complex Regional Pain Syndromes
Pain
Hyperalgesia
Disease Models, Animal
Pain Measurement
Immunohistochemistry
Physical Stimulation
Behavior, Animal
Male
Cold Temperature
Hot Temperature
Biomarkers
DOI: 10.1006/exnr.2002.7897
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/exnr.2002.7897
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Paediatrics publications

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