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Publication : Neurotrophin-3 reverses chronic mechanical hyperalgesia induced by intramuscular acid injection.

First Author  Gandhi R Year  2004
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  24
Issue  42 Pages  9405-13
PubMed ID  15496676 Mgi Jnum  J:132848
Mgi Id  MGI:3777046 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0899-04.2004
Citation  Gandhi R, et al. (2004) Neurotrophin-3 reverses chronic mechanical hyperalgesia induced by intramuscular acid injection. J Neurosci 24(42):9405-13
abstractText  Injection of acid into the gastrocnemius muscle results in a persistent, mechanical hyperalgesia of the hindpaw (Sluka et al., 2001). Here, the ability of neurotrophins to alter the development of this secondary hyperalgesia was assessed using transgenic mice and exogenous neurotrophin administration. Acid-induced hyperalgesia was measured in wild-type and transgenic mice that overexpress neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) in muscle (myo/NT-3 mice). Mechanical and thermal sensitivity of the hindpaws were assessed after injections of acidic saline, pH 4, into the right medial gastrocnemius. Wild-type mice exhibited mechanical but not thermal hyperalgesia in both paws 1 d after acid injection. In contrast, myo/NT-3 mice developed a transient mechanical hyperalgesia in both paws that disappeared by 2-3 d. The reversal of hyperalgesia in myo/NT-3 mice could be mimicked by intramuscular administration of exogenous NT-3 to acid-injected mice but not by other neurotrophins. The route of NT-3 administration appears critical, because intrathecal or intraperitoneal delivery were ineffective. The hyperalgesia could only be reversed by NT-3 treatment concurrent with acid injection and not after the emergence of hyperalgesia. The acid-induced hyperalgesia did not redevelop after the termination of NT-3 treatment, suggesting that NT-3 permanently reversed the hyperalgesia. Consistent with the behavioral data, paw palpation of acid-injected mice significantly increased Fos expression in the spinal cord of wild-type but not myo/NT-3 or NT-3-injected mice. The attenuation of hyperalgesia suggests that NT-3 may be a modulator of muscle-derived pain, and NT-3 may suppress events that lead to secondary hyperalgesia triggered by insult to muscle afferents.
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