Quinpirole-induced alterations of tail temperature appear as hyperalgesia in the radiant heat tail-flick test.

Pharmacol Biochem Behav

Division of Molecular Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Northeast Louisiana University, Monroe 71209-0470, USA.

Published: January 1998

AI Article Synopsis

  • Several recent studies debate how changes in tail temperature affect results in the tail-flick test.
  • This research confirms that the dopamine agonist, quinpirole, lowers the response time in this test, but the observed pain sensitivity is likely due to increased tail temperature rather than the drug's effect on pain perception.
  • After controlling for tail temperature, quinpirole showed no significant impact on response latency, suggesting that tail temperature significantly influences the results of pain assessments like the tail-flick test.

Article Abstract

Several reports in the recent literature argue both for and against the importance of alterations of tail-temperature in the outcome of the tail-flick test. The data we present here support the assertion that drug-induced changes of tail-temperature may have a highly significant effect on tail-flick latency independent of drug-induced changes in nociception. We previously reported that peripherally administered injections of the dopamine agonist, quinpirole, produce significant reductions in the latency of response in the tail-flick test. This present work confirms our earlier findings; however, it indicates that the apparent hyperalgesia is an artifactual function of quinpirole-induced increases in tail temperature. Quinpirole (0.1-1.0 mg/kg I.P.) produced significant (p < 0.001), dose-dependent, and highly correlated increases in tail temperature and decreases in tail-flick latency 15 min following injection. When controls for the change in tail temperature were applied, there was no distinguishable effect of the drug on tail-flick latencies. Sixty minutes following the administration of quinpirole there was no observable effect of the drug on either tail-temperature or tail-flick latency. The results of this study indicate that a) peripherally administered quinpirole has no effect on nociception as measured in the tail-flick test apart from its ability to alter tail temperature; and b) alterations in tail temperature may significantly alter the outcome of the tail-flick test.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0091-3057(97)00325-0DOI Listing

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