Patel Ryan, Dickenson Anthony H
Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology, University College London, London, United Kingdom
Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Jul 1;116(1):159-70. doi: 10.1152/jn.00237.2016. Epub 2016 Apr 20.
Neuropathic pain represents a substantial clinical challenge; understanding the underlying neural mechanisms and back-translation of therapeutics could aid targeting of treatments more effectively. The ventral posterior thalamus (VP) is the major termination site for the spinothalamic tract and relays nociceptive activity to the somatosensory cortex; however, under neuropathic conditions, it is unclear how hyperexcitability of spinal neurons converges onto thalamic relays. This study aimed to identify neural substrates of hypersensitivity and the influence of pregabalin on central processing. In vivo electrophysiology was performed to record from VP wide dynamic range (WDR) and nociceptive-specific (NS) neurons in anesthetized spinal nerve-ligated (SNL), sham-operated, and naive rats. In neuropathic rats, WDR neurons had elevated evoked responses to low- and high-intensity punctate mechanical stimuli, dynamic brushing, and innocuous and noxious cooling, but less so to heat stimulation, of the receptive field. NS neurons in SNL rats also displayed increased responses to noxious punctate mechanical stimulation, dynamic brushing, noxious cooling, and noxious heat. Additionally, WDR, but not NS, neurons in SNL rats exhibited substantially higher rates of spontaneous firing, which may correlate with ongoing pain. The ratio of WDR-to-NS neurons was comparable between SNL and naive/sham groups, suggesting relatively few NS neurons gain sensitivity to low-intensity stimuli leading to a "WDR phenotype." After neuropathy was induced, the proportion of cold-sensitive WDR and NS neurons increased, supporting the suggestion that changes in frequency-dependent firing and population coding underlie cold hypersensitivity. In SNL rats, pregabalin inhibited mechanical and heat responses but not cold-evoked or elevated spontaneous activity.
神经性疼痛是一项重大的临床挑战;了解其潜在的神经机制以及治疗方法的反向转化有助于更有效地靶向治疗。腹后丘脑(VP)是脊髓丘脑束的主要终止部位,可将伤害性活动传递至体感皮层;然而,在神经性疼痛的情况下,尚不清楚脊髓神经元的过度兴奋是如何汇聚到丘脑中继神经元上的。本研究旨在确定超敏反应的神经基础以及普瑞巴林对中枢处理的影响。采用体内电生理学方法,记录麻醉的脊髓神经结扎(SNL)大鼠、假手术大鼠和正常大鼠腹后丘脑广动力范围(WDR)神经元和伤害性特异性(NS)神经元的活动。在神经性疼痛大鼠中,WDR神经元对低强度和高强度点状机械刺激、动态刷擦以及无害和有害冷刺激的诱发反应增强,但对感受野热刺激的反应增强程度较小。SNL大鼠中的NS神经元对有害点状机械刺激、动态刷擦、有害冷刺激和有害热刺激的反应也增强。此外,SNL大鼠中的WDR神经元(而非NS神经元)的自发放电率显著更高,这可能与持续性疼痛相关。SNL组与正常/假手术组之间WDR神经元与NS神经元的比例相当,这表明相对较少的NS神经元获得了对低强度刺激的敏感性,从而导致“WDR表型”。诱发神经病变后,冷敏WDR和NS神经元的比例增加,这支持了频率依赖性放电和群体编码的变化是冷超敏反应基础的观点。在SNL大鼠中,普瑞巴林抑制机械和热反应,但不抑制冷诱发反应或升高的自发放电活动。