AN ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY OF DORSAL HORN NEURONS IN THE SPINAL-CORD OF RATS WITH AN EXPERIMENTAL PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY

Citation
Jma. Laird et Gj. Bennett, AN ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY OF DORSAL HORN NEURONS IN THE SPINAL-CORD OF RATS WITH AN EXPERIMENTAL PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY, Journal of neurophysiology, 69(6), 1993, pp. 2072-2085
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00223077
Volume
69
Issue
6
Year of publication
1993
Pages
2072 - 2085
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3077(1993)69:6<2072:AESODH>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
1. Extracellular single-unit recordings have been made from 295 dorsal horn neurons in the lumbar enlargement of rat spinal cord; 191 neuron s in 20 rats with an experimental peripheral neuropathy, and 104 in 1 0 sham-operated rats. Recordings were made 9-11 days after inducing th e neuropathy by tying four loose ligatures around the sciatic nerve in the nerve-injured rats or performing a sham procedure in the sham-ope rated rats. 2. A survey of the general properties of all neurons encou ntered was made in the 1 0 sham-operated rats ( 104 neurons) and compa red with those seen in 17 of the nerve-injured animals ( 1 80 neurons) . The vast majority (87%; 156/180) of neurons recorded in the nerve-in jured animals showed abnormal characteristics; these included response s to very gentle mechanical stimulation of the nerve-injury site and t o manipulations that resulted in movement of this site such as extensi on of the leg and probing of the skin and muscle of the thigh (53%), a bsence of detectable peripheral receptive fields (RFs; 56%), and very high spontaneous activity (7%). In the sham-operated rats none of the neurons recorded could be activated by gentle mechanical stimulation o f the sciatic nerve, and only 6% had no detectable peripheral RF. 3. I n the nerve-injured animals, 31% (55/180) of cells had both a peripher al RF, and a response to gentle mechanical stimulation of the nerve-in jury site. All cells of this type tested (n = 5) showed very prolonged responses (up to 10 min long) to 15 s pinch stimuli applied to the RF and to 15 s gentle tapping of the injury site. The majority of cells in this group were excited by noxious stimuli (71%; 39/55) and had C-f iber inputs (60%; 33/55). 4. The mean threshold temperatures for evoki ng responses to heat stimuli in cells tested in nerve-injured rats and in sham-operated animals were not different. However, there was a gro up of neurons in the nerve-injured rats that had low thresholds, faile d to encode stimulus intensity, and did not have a C-fiber input. 5. T here were significantly fewer neurons excited by low-intensity stimula tion of the skin in the nerve-injured (24%; 43/180) than in the sham-o perated rats (71%; 74/104). Measurements of mechanical threshold with von Frey hairs showed that, although the mean threshold did not change , none of the cells tested in the nerve-injured animals had thresholds < 12 mN, whereas the lowest threshold recorded in the sham-operated a nimals was 0.2 mN. 6. We conclude that, whereas some of the abnormalit ies seen in the properties of dorsal horn neurons in the nerve-injured rats are likely to be deficits produced by the substantial damage to the nerve, such as the loss of peripheral RFs and loss of low-threshol d inputs, others, such as the response to stimulation of the injury si te, abnormally prolonged responses to stimuli applied to RFs, and incr eased spontaneous activity are likely to be due to central changes and to the presence of a novel source of input at the site of nerve injur y. We propose that input from the nerve-injury site accounts for the p ain-related guarding behavior seen in the nerve injured rats and may s ummate with ''normal'' input to produce the lowered thresholds to exte rnal stimuli seen in these animals. This input may also serve to maint ain a central abnormality. The prominent afterdischarges seen in some cells are likely to contribute to the abnormally prolonged and intense responses of the nerve-injured animals to even mild noxious stimuli. We conclude that dorsal horn mechanisms make a considerable contributi on to the abnormal behavior of rats with an experimental peripheral ne uropathy and are likely to contribute to abnormal sensations in patien ts with neuropathic pain.