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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Elevated substance-P-like immunoreactivity levels in spinal dialysates during the formalin test in normal and diabetic rats.

Pharmacologic studies implicate the involvement of substance P in spinal nociceptive processing during the formalin test. However, no direct measurement of the temporal changes in substance P levels within the spinal cord of conscious animals has been reported. Further, dissociation between substance P levels and formalin-evoked nocifensive behavior may exist in diabetic rats, as exaggerated hyperalgesic behavior coexists with reduced peripheral nerve substance P levels. The present study was performed to directly measure the appearance of substance-P-like immunoreactivity (SP-LI) in spinal CSF of conscious, unrestrained rats using microdialysis techniques following injection of formalin into the hindpaw. The effect of diabetes upon formalin-evoked SP-LI levels in spinal CSF dialysates was also determined. In control rats, SP-LI increased in spinal dialysates following formalin injection and levels were maximal 20-30 min after injection, rising to 325% of basal values (p<0.02). Diabetic rats exhibited reduced (p<0.05) SP-LI in their spinal roots, while basal levels in spinal CSF were not different from controls. Formalin-evoked nocifensive behavior was increased in diabetic rats but SP-LI levels in spinal CSF dialysates after paw formalin injection were significantly (p<0.05) attenuated, reaching a maximum of only 161% of basal levels. This was accompanied by attenuated swelling at the formalin injection site and increased thermal response latencies. While increased SP-LI in spinal CSF coincides with phase 2 behavior in the formalin test and may contribute to spinal nociceptive processing during this period, exaggerated spinal substance P release is unlikely to underlie the increased nocifensive behavior seen in diabetic rats.[1]

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