Pain
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Comparative Study
Pronociceptive role of peripheral and spinal 5-HT7 receptors in the formalin test.
The possible pronociceptive role of peripheral and spinal 5-HT7 receptors in the formalin test was assessed. Local administration of 5-HT7 (SB-269970, 2.5-77.1 nmol/paw), but not 5-HT(1A) (WAY-100635, 1-60 nmol/paw), receptor antagonist significantly reduced formalin-induced flinching. Local 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, 3-100 nmol/paw) or 5-carboxamidotryptamine (5-CT, 0.3-3 nmol/paw) (a 5-HT7/1A receptor agonist) augmented, in a dose-dependent manner, 0.5% formalin-induced nociceptive behavior. ⋯ In addition, the spinal antinociceptive effect of 5-CT was partially reversed by WAY-100635 (10 nmol/rat). The spinal antinociceptive effect of 5-HT was unaffected either by SB-269970 (77 nmol/rat) or WAY-100635 (10 nmol/rat). Data suggest that 5-HT7, but not 5-HT1A, receptors play a pronociceptive role in peripheral and spinal sites in the rat formalin test.