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Chronic stress, sensory hypersensitivity, anxiety-induced hyperalgesia.

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Title: Chronic stress, sensory hypersensitivity, anxiety-induced hyperalgesia.


1
Chronic stress, sensory hypersensitivity,
anxiety-induced hyperalgesia.
  • Tori Collins

2
Pain and Stress
  • Chronic pain is an inescapable stress
  • Many patients with chronic pain suffer from
    depression
  • Depressed patients have an altered perception of
    pain
  • Biggest risk factor for depression is chronic
    stress
  • Blackburn-Munros Blackburn-Munro 2001

3
Pain integration
  • Descending control of nociception plays a role in
    how we experience acute and chronic pain
  • Nociceptive input is prioritized relative to
    other homeostatic needs
  • Descending control can be stimulatory or
    inhibitory
  • Can depend on behavioral, emotional and
    pathological states

4
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5
Pain integration
  • Descending inhibition intense stress and fear
    are associated with hypoalgesia
  • Descending facilitation inflammation, nerve
    injury, sickness, chronic opioid exposure are
    associated with hyperalgesia

6
Pain integration
  • The RVM can produce both analgesia and
    hyperalgesia
  • Opiods, OFF-cells analgesia
  • CCK, ON-cells hyperalgesia

7
Chronic stress induces transient spinal
neuroinflammation, triggering sensory
hypersensitivity and long-lasting anxiety-induced
hyperalgesia
  • Rivat C et. al.

8
Intro
  • After repetitive and sustained stress adaptation
    is impaired
  • Hypercortisolism
  • Hypertension
  • Neuropsychiatric disorders
  • Immune system can be affected
  • Increased inflammatory response
  • Excess of COX-2 leads to neuronal damage

9
Intro
  • Social defeat is a model for psychological
    chronic stress
  • Animals display anxiety/depression-like behaviors

10
Methods
  • Intruders (male Sprague-Dawley rats 300-325g)
  • Residents (male Long-Evans rats, 700-800g)
  • Rats were divided into defeated intruders and
    non-defeated intruders each receiving either
    vehicle or drug

11
Social defeat
  • Intruders were placed into residents cage for 45
    min periods on 4 consecutive days
  • Period 1 no physical contact
  • Period 2 either intruder was defeated by
    resident or resident was removed and intruder
    allowed to explore freely (non-defeated group)

12
Experimental design
13
Elevated plus maze
14
Methods
  • Nociceptive sensitivity was assessed with von
    Frey and Randall-Selitto tests

15
Methods
  • Formalin was injected under the skin on the
    dorsal surface of the hindpaw and pain responses
    were recorded for 70 min
  • Pain is assessed on a 5 level scale according to
    posture
  • Ex. 0 normal posture, 4 shaking, licking or
    biting of paw

16
Figure 1
17
Figure 2
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Figure 3
19
Figure 3
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21
Figure 4
22
Figure 5
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Figure 5
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Figure 6
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Figure 7 7
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Figure 7 7
27
Discussion
  • Psychological stress produced a transient plastic
    change in the spinal cord
  • Spinal inflammation was correlated with
    mechanical sensory hypersensitivity
  • RVM-CCK dependent descending pathways
  • Distinct mechanisms for sensory hypersensitivity
    and formalin-induced hyperalgesia

28
Discussion
  • Spinal neuroinflammation was related to sensory
    hypersensitivity mediated by iNOS and COX-2 but
    not to anxiety
  • The inflammation was linked to the stress itself,
    not the anxiety state produced by the stress

29
Discussion
  • The decrease in pain threshold in the rats
    exposed to social defeat was related to
    CCK-dependent facilitatory pathways from the RVM
  • A CCK-2 receptor antagonist may provide pain
    relief in the context of anxiety-induced
    hyperalgesia

30
FIGHT THE POWER
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vWmBrEQ6Kh9o
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