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Normal and injury-induced sympathetic innervation of rat dorsal root ganglia increases with age

โœ Scribed by Ramer, Matt S.; Bisby, Mark A.


Book ID
102648617
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
618 KB
Volume
394
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9967

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โœฆ Synopsis


In rats, partial injury to a peripheral nerve often leads to sympathetically maintained pain (SMP). In humans, this condition is especially apparent in the elderly. Nerve injury also causes perivascular sympathetic axons to sprout into the dorsal root ganglion (DRG), forming a possible anatomical substrate for SMP. Here, we describe the effects of chronic sciatic nerve constriction injury (CCI) in young (3 months) and old (16 months) rats on neuropathic pain behavior and on sympathetic sprouting in DRG. Behavioral tests assessed changes in thermal allodynia and hyperalgesia and in mechanical allodynia. We found that 1) sympathetic innervation of the DRG increased naturally with age, forming pericellular baskets mainly around large DRG neurons, and that sympathetic fibers were often associated with myelinated sensory axons; 2) sympathetic fiber density following CCI was also greater in old than in young rats; and 3) in old rats, thermal allodynia was less pronounced than in young rats, whereas thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia were more pronounced. These results highlight the possibility that sympathetic sprouting in the DRG is responsible for the sympathetic generation or maintenance of pain, especially in the elderly.


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## Abstract Capsaicin is a neurotoxin selective for Cโ€ and Aฮดโ€type neurons. Systemic treatment with capsaicin is known to reduce this subpopulation in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of neonatal rats. To better understand the effects of capsaicin on adult afferent fibers, we examined DRG neurons retr