Choi Y, Raja S N, Moore L C, Tobin J R
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287-5354, USA.
J Neurol Sci. 1996 Jun;138(1-2):14-20. doi: 10.1016/0022-510x(95)00325-v.
Peripheral nerve injury may lead to a chronic neuropathic pain state that results from an increase in excitability of central neurons. This central sensitization is mediated via an N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor and may involve the production of nitric oxide (NO). As NO is suggested to play a role in nociceptive transmission following nerve injury, we examined for altered NO synthase activity at multiple levels of peripheral and spinal neural tissue in a rat model of neuropathic pain. Peripheral neuropathy was induced in rats (N = 12) by ligation of the left L5 and L6 nerve roots. Six other rats had sham surgery. An ipsilateral decrease in paw withdrawal threshold to mechanical stimuli confirmed the presence of a neuropathic pain state. Samples of the lumbar and thoracic spinal cords, L4, L5, and L6 dorsal root ganglia (DRGs), and the sciatic nerves were obtained from the lesioned and contralateral sides at 2 and 4 weeks after neuropathic surgery (N = 6 per group). In the lumbar spinal cord, a bilateral decrease in nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity was observed 2 and 4 weeks after neuropathic surgery. NOS activity was increased in the ipsilateral L5 and 6 DRGs 2 weeks following neuropathic surgery. An increase in NOS activity in the DRG may be an early mechanism for inducing more central changes. The bilaterally decreased NOS activity in the lumbar spinal cord may be secondary to a negative feedback mechanism resulting from increased NO production in the spinal dorsal root ganglia. Multiple alterations in expression of NOS activity that occur in both peripheral and central processing may play a role in the pain behavior resulting from peripheral nerve injury. (Preliminary results of these studies have been presented in abstract form at the annual meetings of the Society for Neuroscience, 1994, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists, 1994).
周围神经损伤可能导致一种慢性神经病理性疼痛状态,这种状态是由中枢神经元兴奋性增加引起的。这种中枢敏化是通过N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体介导的,并且可能涉及一氧化氮(NO)的产生。由于NO被认为在神经损伤后的伤害性传递中起作用,我们在神经性疼痛大鼠模型中检查了外周和脊髓神经组织多个水平上一氧化氮合酶活性的变化。通过结扎大鼠(N = 12)的左侧L5和L6神经根诱导周围神经病变。另外六只大鼠接受假手术。对机械刺激的爪退缩阈值同侧降低证实了神经病理性疼痛状态的存在。在神经病变手术后2周和4周,从损伤侧和对侧获取腰段和胸段脊髓、L4、L5和L6背根神经节(DRG)以及坐骨神经的样本(每组N = 6)。在腰段脊髓,神经病变手术后2周和4周观察到一氧化氮合酶(NOS)活性双侧降低。神经病变手术后2周,同侧L5和6 DRG中NOS活性增加。DRG中NOS活性增加可能是诱导更多中枢变化的早期机制。腰段脊髓中NOS活性双侧降低可能继发于脊髓背根神经节中NO产生增加导致的负反馈机制。外周和中枢处理中发生的NOS活性表达的多种改变可能在周围神经损伤引起的疼痛行为中起作用。(这些研究的初步结果已以摘要形式在1994年神经科学学会年会和1994年美国麻醉医师学会年会上发表)