Department of Physiology, Neuroscience and Inflammation Unit, College of Health Sciences, Faculty of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Ilorin, Ilorin, Nigeria; and, Bioresearch Hub Laboratory, Ilorin.
Onderstepoort J Vet Res. 2021 Jan 11;88(1):e1-e18. doi: 10.4102/ojvr.v88i1.1871.
Various types of pain were reported by people with Plasmodium falciparum and were mostly attributed to a symptom of malarial infection. Neural processes of pain sensation during malarial infection and their contributions to malaria-related death are poorly understood. Thus, these form the focus of this study. Swiss mice used for this study were randomly divided into two groups. Animals in the first group (Pb-infected group) were inoculated with Plasmodium berghei to induce malaria whilst the other group (intact group) was not infected. Formalin test was used to assess pain sensitivity in both groups and using various antagonists, the possible mechanism for deviation in pain sensitivity was probed. Also, plasma and brain samples collected from animals in both groups were subjected to biochemical and/or histological studies. The results showed that Pb-infected mice exhibited diminished pain-related behaviours to noxious chemical. The observed parasite-induced analgesia appeared to be synergistically mediated via µ-opioid, α2 and 5HT2A receptors. When varied drugs capable of decreasing pain threshold (pro-nociceptive drugs) were used, the survival rate was not significantly different in the Pb-infected mice. This showed little or no contribution of the pain processing system to malaria-related death. Also, using an anti-CD68 antibody, there was no immunopositive cell in the brain to attribute the observed effects to cerebral malaria. Although in the haematoxylin and eosin-stained tissues, there were mild morphological changes in the motor and anterior cingulate cortices. In conclusion, the pain symptom was remarkably decreased in the animal model for malaria, and thus, the model may not be appropriate for investigating malaria-linked pain as reported in humans. This is the first report showing that at a critical point, the malaria parasite caused pain-relieving effects in Swiss mice.
各种类型的疼痛都有报告发生在疟原虫感染的人群中,且大多归因于疟疾感染的一种症状。疟原虫感染期间疼痛感觉的神经过程及其对疟疾相关死亡的贡献知之甚少。因此,这是本研究的重点。用于本研究的瑞士小鼠被随机分为两组。第一组(Pb 感染组)接种伯氏疟原虫以诱导疟疾,而另一组(完整组)未感染。使用福尔马林试验评估两组动物的疼痛敏感性,并使用各种拮抗剂,探究疼痛敏感性偏差的可能机制。此外,从两组动物收集的血浆和脑组织样本进行了生化和/或组织学研究。结果表明,Pb 感染的小鼠对有害化学物质的疼痛相关行为减少。观察到的寄生虫诱导的镇痛似乎通过 µ 阿片样物质、α2 和 5HT2A 受体协同介导。当使用各种能够降低疼痛阈值的药物(促伤害性药物)时,Pb 感染的小鼠的存活率没有明显差异。这表明疼痛处理系统对疟疾相关死亡的贡献很小或没有。此外,使用抗 CD68 抗体,大脑中没有免疫阳性细胞可归因于观察到的效应是由于脑疟疾。尽管在苏木精和伊红染色的组织中,运动皮质和前扣带回皮质有轻度的形态学改变。总之,在疟疾动物模型中,疼痛症状显著减轻,因此,该模型可能不适合研究人类报告的与疟疾相关的疼痛。这是首次报道在关键时期,疟原虫在瑞士小鼠中引起止痛作用。