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Motor cortex stimulation in rats with chronic constriction injury
S. Vaculin, M. Franek, A. Yamamotova, R. Rokyta
Language English Country Germany
Document type Comparative Study
NLK
ProQuest Central
from 2001-01-01 to 1 year ago
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
from 2000-01-01 to 1 year ago
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
from 2001-01-01 to 1 year ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 2001-01-01 to 1 year ago
Psychology Database (ProQuest)
from 2001-01-01 to 1 year ago
- MeSH
- Pain physiopathology prevention & control MeSH
- Electric Stimulation Therapy methods MeSH
- Rats MeSH
- Pain Measurement methods MeSH
- Motor Cortex physiology MeSH
- Sciatic Neuropathy physiopathology MeSH
- Rats, Wistar MeSH
- Constriction, Pathologic physiopathology prevention & control MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Rats MeSH
- Male MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Comparative Study MeSH
Motor cortex stimulation (MCS) has gained a significant role in treatment of neuropathic pain. In order to evaluate effect of MCS in experimental animals we applied MCS to rats with neuropathic pain, which was evoked by chronic constriction injury (CCI) to the left sciatic nerve. Pain thresholds of both hind limbs were measured before, immediately after MCS, 1 h after MCS and 1 day after MCS. Effect of the stimulation was studied with respect to laterality (contralateral and ipsilateral MCS) and duration (short-term 10-min and long-term 1-h stimulation). It was found out that in control rats MCS did not affect thermal nociceptive thresholds. However, in CCI animals following results were obtained: difference score (difference in paw withdrawal latency between ligated and non-ligated hind limb) significantly decreased after both short- and long-term contralateral MCS; the difference score after the long-term ipsilateral MCS (related to the ligated hind limb) was not significantly different from that of intact animals; the effects of the contralateral short-term and the ipsilateral long-term stimulation faded within 1 h after the end of MCS, while the effect of the contralateral long-term MCS remained 1 h after the end of the MCS and faded within 24 h. It is concluded that MCS in experimental animals exerts similar effects as in human suffering from neuropathic pain and that the effect might be evoked from both cerebral cortices.
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- $a 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Department of Normal, Pathological and Clinical Physiology, Charles University in Prague, Prague, The Czech Republic. svaculin@lf3.cuni.cz
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- $a Motor cortex stimulation (MCS) has gained a significant role in treatment of neuropathic pain. In order to evaluate effect of MCS in experimental animals we applied MCS to rats with neuropathic pain, which was evoked by chronic constriction injury (CCI) to the left sciatic nerve. Pain thresholds of both hind limbs were measured before, immediately after MCS, 1 h after MCS and 1 day after MCS. Effect of the stimulation was studied with respect to laterality (contralateral and ipsilateral MCS) and duration (short-term 10-min and long-term 1-h stimulation). It was found out that in control rats MCS did not affect thermal nociceptive thresholds. However, in CCI animals following results were obtained: difference score (difference in paw withdrawal latency between ligated and non-ligated hind limb) significantly decreased after both short- and long-term contralateral MCS; the difference score after the long-term ipsilateral MCS (related to the ligated hind limb) was not significantly different from that of intact animals; the effects of the contralateral short-term and the ipsilateral long-term stimulation faded within 1 h after the end of MCS, while the effect of the contralateral long-term MCS remained 1 h after the end of the MCS and faded within 24 h. It is concluded that MCS in experimental animals exerts similar effects as in human suffering from neuropathic pain and that the effect might be evoked from both cerebral cortices.
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