Inoculation of Lewis lung carcinoma cells enhances formalin-induced pain behavior and spinal Fos expression in mice.

J Vet Sci

Department of Physiology and Medical Science and Brain Research Institute, College of Medicine, Chungnam National University, Daejeon 35015, Korea.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores how Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells affect pain perception in mice by inoculating them in different areas, focusing on their impact on pain behavior and spinal Fos expression.
  • - Results showed that higher doses of LLC cells increased pain responses and spinal Fos levels compared to control mice, indicating a significant effect of cancer cells on pain pathways.
  • - Ibuprofen treatment reduced the enhanced pain behavior and spinal Fos expression, suggesting that inflammatory factors and LLC cell signals play major roles in developing pain early in lung cancer.

Article Abstract

The incidence of lung cancer has rapidly increased and cancer patients at a later cancer stage frequently suffer from unbearable cancer-associated pain. However, the pathophysiology of lung cancer pain has not been fully described due to a lack of appropriate animal models. This study was designed to determine the effect of Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cell inoculation on formalin-induced pain behavior and spinal Fos expression in C57BL/6 mice. LLC cells (1.5 × 10, 2.5 × 10, 3.0 × 10 or 5.0 × 10) were inoculated into back or peri-sciatic nerve areas. Back area inoculation was adopted to determine the effect of cancer cell circulating factors and the peri-sciatic nerve area was used to evaluate the possible effects of cancer cell contacting and circulating factors on formalin-induced pain. At postinoculation day 7, LLC cell (5.0 × 10) inoculations in both back and peri-sciatic nerve area significantly increased formalin-induced paw-licking time and spinal Fos expression over those in cell-media-inoculated (control) mice. Enhanced pain behavior and spinal Fos expression were significantly suppressed by ibuprofen pretreatment (250 mg/kg). The results of this study suggest that LLC cell circulating factors and inflammatory responses may be critical in enhancing pain sensation in the early stage of lung cancer cell inoculation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5639078PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4142/jvs.2017.18.3.267DOI Listing

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