• Pain · Jul 2005

    Comparative Study

    Repeated sound stress enhances inflammatory pain in the rat.

    • Sachia G Khasar, Paul G Green, and Jon D Levine.
    • Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-0440, USA.
    • Pain. 2005 Jul 1; 116 (1-2): 79-86.

    AbstractWhile it is well established that acute stress can produce antinociception, a phenomenon referred to as stress-induced analgesia, repeated exposure to stress can have the opposite effect. Since, chronic pain syndromes, such as fibromyalgia and rheumatoid arthritis, may be triggered and/or exacerbated by chronic stress, we have evaluated the effect of repeated stress on mechanical nociceptive threshold and inflammatory hyperalgesia. Using the Randall-Selitto paw pressure test to quantify nociceptive threshold in the rat, we found that repeated non-habituating sound stress enhanced the mechanical hyperalgesia induced by the potent inflammatory mediator, bradykinin, which, in normal rats, produces hyperalgesia indirectly by stimulating the release of prostaglandin E2 from sympathetic nerve terminals. Hyperalgesia induced by the direct-acting inflammatory mediator, prostaglandin E2 as well as the baseline nociceptive threshold, were not affected. Adrenal medullectomy or denervation, reversed the effect of sound stress. In sound stressed animals, bradykinin-hyperalgesia had a more rapid latency to onset and was no longer inhibited by sympathectomy, compatible with a direct effect of bradykinin on primary afferent nociceptors. In addition, implants of epinephrine restored bradykinin-hyperalgesia in sympathectomized non-stressed rats, lending further support to the suggestion that increased plasma levels of epinephrine can sensitize primary afferents to bradykinin. These results suggest that stress-induced enhancement of inflammatory hyperalgesia is associated with a change in mechanism by which bradykinin induces hyperalgesia, from being sympathetically mediated to being sympathetically independent. This sympathetic-independent enhancement of mechanical hyperalgesia is mediated by the stress-induced release of epinephrine from the adrenal medulla.

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