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Mechanical compression of the lumbar nerve root alters pain-related behaviors induced by the nucleus pulposus in the rat

✍ Scribed by Mamoru Kawakami; Tetsuya Tamaki; Nobuhiro Hayashi; Hiroshi Hashizume; Takuji Matsumoto; Akihito Minamide; Tameko Kihira


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
894 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0736-0266

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The purpose of this study was to refine a method of nerve‐root injury in the rat to produce hyperalgesia, a pain‐related behavior, and to determine if there were any relationships between the histological extent of nerve‐root injury and the magnitude of hyperalgesia. Three methods were used to produce hyperalgesia: irritation of a nerve root by ectopic nucleus pulposus, silk loop alone, or both silk loop and ectopic nucleus pulposus. Autologous nucleus pulposus obtained from coccygeal intervertebral discs was relocated on the lumbar nerve roots after laminectomy. Two loops of 4‐0 silk were placed around the exposed nerve roots. Hyperalgesia was measured preoperatively and postoperatively. The distribution of myelinated axons in the dorsal nerve roots was evaluated histologically. Mechanical hyperalgesia was detected in rats in which autologous nucleus pulposus was applied to the nerve root but not in those in which silk loops were used. Silk loops around the nerve root resulted in thermal hyperalgesia only in rats in which autologous nucleus pulposus was applied to the nerve root. Fewer large myelinated fibers were seen in the rats in which silk loops were used. Although a silk loop around the nerve root was not sufficient to produce hyperalgesia, supplemental application of autologous nucleus pulposus to the nerve root produced thermal hyperalgesia. It is possible that mechanical constriction of the nerve root alters the pain‐related behavior elicited by chemical factors from the nucleus pulposus.


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