AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create a long-term pain model using long-term potentiation in pigs to better understand pain mechanisms.
  • Researchers recorded brain activity in pigs before, during, and after stimulating the ulnar nerve with high-frequency stimulation (HFS) while also measuring their sensitivity to pain.
  • Results showed that mechanical sensitivity increased significantly after HFS and correlated with changes in brain activity, suggesting that the pig model closely mimics human pain conditions.

Article Abstract

Translational models of the sensitized pain system are needed to progress the understanding of involved mechanisms. In this study, long-term potentiation was used to develop a mechanism-based large-animal pain model. Event-related potentials to electrical stimulation of the ulnar nerve were recorded by intracranial recordings in pigs, 3 weeks before, immediately before and after, and 3 weeks after peripheral high-frequency stimulation (HFS) applied to the ulnar nerve in the right forelimb (7 pigs) or in control animals (5 pigs). Event-related potential recordings and peripheral HFS were done during anesthesia. Two weeks before and after the HFS, behavioral responses reflecting mechanical and thermal sensitivity were collected using brush, noxious limb-mounted pressure algometer, and noxious laser stimuli. The HFS intervention limb was progressively sensitized to noxious mechanical stimulation in week 1 and 2 compared with baseline ( P = 0.045) and the control group ( P < 0.034) but not significantly to laser or brush stimulation. The first negative (N1) peak of the event-related potential was increased 30 minutes after HFS compared with before ( P < 0.05). The N1 peak was also larger compared with control pigs 20 to 40 minutes after HFS ( P < 0.031) but not significantly increased 3 weeks after. The relative increase in N1 30 minutes after HFS and the degree of mechanical hyperalgesia 2 weeks post-HFS was correlated ( P < 0.033). These results show for the first time that the pig HFS model resembles the human HFS model closely where the profile of sensitization is comparable. Interestingly, the degree of sensitization was associated with the cortical signs of hyperexcitability at HFS induction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003354DOI Listing

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