Spinal nociceptive transmission in the spontaneously hypertensive and Wistar-Kyoto normotensive rat
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 58 (2), 169-183
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(94)90197-x
Abstract
Background and noxious heat-evoked responses of wide-dynamic-range (WDR) and high-threshold (HT) lumbosacral spinal dorsal horn neurons were recorded in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs), Wistar-Kyoto normotensive rats (WKYs), lifetime captopril-treated SHRs, SHRs with bilateral cervical vagotomy, SHRs with bilateral sino-aortic deafferentation (SAD), and SHRs with either a single or repeated administration of naloxone methobromide (NMB). Stimulus-response functions (SRFs) were generated for neurons using 15 sec of heating of the foot at temperatures ranging from 38 to 52 degrees C. Comparisons were made of neuronal response thresholds, slopes of the SRFs, mean discharge frequency during heat stimulation, arterial blood pressure (ABP), and heart rate (HR). The primary finding was that group mean SRFs for both WDR and HT neurons were shifted in a parallel, rightward fashion in SHRs compared to WKYs. Heat-evoked response thresholds were increased and asymptotic discharge frequencies were decreased in WDR and HT neurons of SHRs compared to WKYs. Analyses of group mean SRFs for WDR and HT neurons of SHRs receiving lifetime captopril treatment indicated they were normalized to the SRFs of WKYs, but detailed comparisons using discharge frequency during heat stimulation revealed that this was due to a statistical averaging effect. Specifically, lifetime captopril-treated SHRs not only showed enhanced neuronal responses to the onset of noxious heat but also enhanced adaptation of neuronal responses with continued heating compared to WKYs. Bilateral SAD in SHRs significantly increased the total discharge frequency of WDR neurons to heat stimuli between 44 and 52 degrees C, but produced no change in the response threshold for heat-evoked activation of these neurons. A similar effect of SAD was observed in HT neurons of SHRs, but the greater response thresholds of HT neurons precluded detection of any significant effect. Bilateral cervical vagotomy did not affect response thresholds, slopes, or total discharge frequencies of SHRs, although only WDR neurons were studied. SRFs of WDR and HT neurons in SHRs obtained pre- and post-administration of a single dose of NMB did not differ. However, repeated administration of NMB in SHRs resulted in a parallel, leftward shift in SRFs of both WDR and HT neurons. In all strains and treatments studied, there were no significant differences in background activities of these neurons that might contribute to the observed outcomes. In conclusion, the hypoalgesia reported in human essential hypertensives and animals with chronic hypertension may be due to a significant attenuation in spinal nociceptive transmission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- The relationship between pain sensitivity and blood pressure in normotensivesPain, 1992
- Interactions Between Cardiovascular and Pain Modulatory Systems: Physiological and Pathophysiological ImplicationsJournal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology, 1991
- Effects of spinal kappa-opioid receptor agonists on the responsiveness of nociceptive superficial dorsal horn neuronsPain, 1991
- Hypertension induced by hypothalamic transplantation from genetically hypertensive to normotensive ratsJournal of Neuroscience, 1991
- Pain perception in chronic pain patients can be reduced by activation of carotid sinus baroreceptors (CSBs)Pain, 1990
- Arterial hypertension is associated with hypalgesia in humans.Hypertension, 1988
- Subplantar yeast injection induces a non-naloxone reversible antinociception in spontaneously hypertensive ratsBrain Research, 1984
- Factors influencing the altered pain perception in the spontaneously hypertensive ratBrain Research, 1982
- Baroreceptor Activation Reduces Reactivity to Noxious Stimulation: Implications for HypertensionScience, 1979
- An analysis of response properties of spinal cord dorsal horn neurones to nonnoxious and noxious stimuli in the spinal ratExperimental Brain Research, 1977