Changes in Properties of Substantia Gelatinosa Neurons after Surgical Incision in the Rat

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Changes in Properties of Substantia Gelatinosa Neurons after Surgical Incision in the Rat"

Transcription

1 Anesthesiology 2006; 104: American Society of Anesthesiologists, Inc. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. Changes in Properties of Substantia Gelatinosa Neurons after Surgical Incision in the Rat In Vivo Patch-clamp Analysis Mikito Kawamata, M.D.,* Hidemasa Furue, Ph.D., Yuji Kozuka, M.D., Eichi Narimatsu, M.D.,* Megumu Yoshimura, M.D., Ph.D., Akiyoshi Namiki, M.D., Ph.D. Background: Noxious information through A and C afferent fibers is transmitted to substantia gelatinosa, a process that plays an important role in plastic changes of nociceptive processing in pathophysiological conditions. In this study, changes in properties of substantia gelatinosa neurons and their sensitivity to systemic administration of lidocaine after surgical incision were investigated using the in vivo patch-clamp technique. Methods: Under urethane anesthesia, in the current clamp mode, spontaneous activities and responses of substantia gelatinosa neurons to nonnoxious air-puff stimuli and noxious pinch stimuli were recorded before and after 1-cm-long incisions had been made in hairy skin of the hindquarters of rats. Systemic administration of lidocaine (2 mg/kg) was applied at 30 min after the incision. Results: Stable recordings for 30 min or more after the incision were obtained from 18 substantia gelatinosa neurons that were classified as multireceptive (n 8), nociceptive (n 5), and subthreshold (n 5) neurons. Action potential firing disappeared immediately after completion of the wound closure in most multireceptive and nociceptive neurons, and sustained spontaneous action potential firing was observed in 23% of these substantia gelatinosa neurons. Responsiveness of these substantia gelatinosa neurons, but not that of subthreshold neurons, increased after the incision. Systemic administration of lidocaine suppressed spontaneous firings of action potentials of the substantia gelatinosa neurons and reversed the increased responsiveness of the neurons. Conclusions: The results suggest that (1) changes in properties of substantia gelatinosa neurons after incision vary depending on the classification of substantia gelatinosa neurons and (2) systemic administration of lidocaine can reverse increased responsiveness of substantia gelatinosa neurons after incision injury. ANALGESIA for postoperative pain or surgical injuryinduced pain not only may lead to increased patient comfort, but also may reduce morbidity after surgery. 1 However, optimal postoperative pain therapy has still not been established, because postoperative pain man- * Assistant Professor, Graduate Student, Professor and Chairman, Department of Anesthesiology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan. Research Associate, Professor, Department of Integrative Physiology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Kyushu, Japan. Received from the Department of Anesthesiology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan. Submitted for publication October 13, Accepted for publication December 13, Supported in part by a grant-in-aid No for scientific research from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan (Tokyo, Japan) to Dr. Kawamata. Presented in part at the Annual Meeting of Neuroscience, New Orleans, Louisiana, November 8 12, 2003, and at the 2005 Journal Symposium of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, Atlanta, Georgia, October 25, Address correspondence to Dr. Kawamata: Department of Anesthesiology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, South-1, West-16, Chuo-ku, Sapporo , Japan. mikitok@sapmed.ac.jp. Individual article reprints may be purchased through the Journal Web site, agement strategies are based mainly on results of studies performed using other types of persistent pain models and because it has been shown that neurochemical and electrophysiological mechanisms of different pain states, such as postoperative, inflammatory, and cancer pain, differ. 2,3 An incision made in glabrous and hairy skin of rodents causes persistent, reduced withdrawal thresholds to mechanical stimuli (mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia), and time courses of primary hyperalgesia and secondary hyperalgesia in these animal models are similar to those in several clinical studies. 4 7 Based on results of behavioral and electrophysiological studies, mechanisms of enhanced sensitivity to pain (allodynia and hyperalgesia) in incision models are thought to differ from those in other types of tissue injury-induced pain in which tissue injury is caused by application of chemical irritants such as capsaicin, mustard oil, and bradykinin First, preemptive analgesic treatments did not prevent development of mechanical hyperalgesia after incision. 11 Second, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-independent factors mainly influence the increased responsiveness of dorsal horn neurons after incision. 12 Third, in dorsal horn neurons located in deep laminae (laminae IV V), wide-dynamic-range neurons are responsible for the hyperexcitability in response to nonnoxious as well as noxious stimuli after incision, whereas high-threshold neurons are not involved in the hyperexcitability, especially that in response to nonnoxious stimulation, after a surgical incision has been made. 6,13 Noxious information is transmitted through fine myelinated A and unmyelinated C afferents from the periphery to the superficial dorsal horn, especially to the substantia gelatinosa (SG; lamina II of Rexed). 14 This sensory information is modified and integrated in the SG and consequently regulates the outputs of projection neurons located in lamina I and laminae IV V. 15,16 SG neurons exhibit a variety of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic responses that range in duration from milliseconds to minutes. 17 Recent studies have indicated that the synaptic connectivity and receptor expression in the SG can be altered easily after peripheral tissue damage and nerve damage. 18,19 In addition, the descending pain inhibitory influence on SG neurons also is modified under certain pathologic conditions. 20 However, changes in properties of SG neurons in a postoperative pain state have not been elucidated. 432

2 SUBSTANTIA GELATINOSA NEURONS AFTER INCISION 433 The aim of the present study was to determine the changes in synaptic transmission of SG neurons after incision using the recently established technique of in vivo patch-clamp recordings. 21 To obtain pharmacological insights into the mechanisms of postoperative pain, we also examined the effects of systemic administration of lidocaine on increased excitability of SG neurons after incision. Materials and Methods Animal Preparation All of the protocols of this study were approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee of Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan. Efforts were made to minimize the number of animals used, and the experiments followed the ethical guidelines of the International Association for the Study of Pain. 22 The experimental method was described in detail previously. 21,23 Briefly, male Sprague-Dawley rats (6 7 weeks of age; g) were anesthetized with urethane ( g/kg intraperitoneal), and the left carotid artery and external jugular vein were cannulated to allow for blood pressure monitoring and for drug administration, respectively. After a tracheotomy, each animal was mechanically ventilated. The lumbar spinal cord was exposed at the level from L3 L5 by a thoracolumbar laminectomy at the level from Th13 to L2, and then the rat was placed in a stereotaxic apparatus (Model ST-7; Narishige, Tokyo, Japan). After opening the dura, a dorsal root that enters the spinal cord above the level of recording sites was lifted using a glass retractor so that a recording electrode could be advanced into the SG from the surface of the spinal cord. The pia arachnoid membrane was cut to make a window large enough to allow the patch electrode to enter the spinal cord. The surface of the spinal cord was irrigated with 95% O 2 5% CO 2 - equilibrated Krebs solution (15 ml/min; NaCl, 117; KCl, 3.6; CaCl 2, 2.5; MgCl 2, 1.2; NaH 2 PO 4, 1.2; glucose, 11; NaHCO 3, 25 mm) through glass pipettes at C. At the end of the experiments, the rats were given an overdose of urethane and then were killed by exsanguination. Body temperature was recorded with a rectal probe and was maintained at 37 C by an infrared heat lamp and heat pad. Patch-clamp Recordings and Cell Identification The patch electrodes were pulled from thin-walled borosilicate glass capillaries (OD, 1.5 mm) using a puller (p-97; Sutter Instrument, Novato, CA). The patch pipette was filled with a solution having the following composition: potassium gluconate, 135; KCl, 5; CaCl 2, 0.5; MgCl 2, 2; EGTA, 5; ATP-Mg, 5; Hepes-KOH, 5 mm. The electrode with a resistance of 8 to 12 M was advanced at an angle of 30 to 45 into the SG through the window using a micromanipulator (Model MHW-4; Narishige, Tokyo, Japan; fig. 1A). After making a gigaohm seal (resistance of at least 5 G ), the membrane patch was ruptured by a brief period of more negative pressure, thus resulting in whole cell configuration. Recordings were made using a patch-clamp amplifier (Axopatch 200B; Axon Instruments, Union City, CA). In the voltage-clamp mode, the holding potentials (V H ) were 70 mv, at which glycine- and -aminobutyric acid mediated inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) were negligible. 24 Then recordings were performed in the current clamp mode. Current and voltage data were digitized with an A/D converter (Digidata 1200; Axon Instruments) and stored on a personal computer using the pclamp 7 data acquisition program (Axon Instruments). Data then were analyzed using a software package (Mini Analysis, version 6.01; Synaptosoft Inc., Fort Lee, NJ). Neurons were recorded at a depth of 30 to 150 m measured from the dorsal surface of the spinal cord to the point of contact with the cell. This distance was identified to be within the SG using transverse slices obtained from the spinal cords of 6- to 8-week-old rats at the same lumbar level. 21 The location and morphological features of the recorded cells were confirmed further in some instances by an intrasomatic injection of biocytin ( % in electrode solution) after obtaining synaptic responses, according to a previously described method. 21 The neuron shown in figure 1B was located in the SG and possessed morphological features similar to those of cells described previously as SG neurons. 25,26 Nonnoxious Stimuli and Noxious Stimuli For cutaneous stimulation, a neuron s receptive field (RF) was first determined by applying nonnoxious stimuli with a paintbrush across the shaved skin of the hindquarter (fig. 1C). The response to noxious stimulation was assessed by pinching the skin over the neuron s RF with forceps. A 1-cm-long line, to be incised, was drawn in the most sensitive region of the RF, and air-puff stimuli (200 p.s.i.) delivered through a pipette ( 200 m) were applied repetitively 1 to 2 mm next to the line (duration of an injection, 100 ms; frequency, 10 Hz; injection time, 10 s) by using a pico injector (PLI-100; Harvard Apparatus, Holliston, MA). The air-puff stimulation did not evoke pain or discomfort sensation in examiners in a pilot study. The noxious mechanical stimuli then were applied to the same site at which air puff was applied with toothed forceps. The toothed forceps was fixed on a rod and a weight (40 g) was placed on the forceps for a prescribed duration of 5 s, by which examiners experienced pinching pain. In a preliminary study, the frequency of excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) of SG neurons increased as the weight (5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 g) increased, and no significant accommodation was observed, thus indicating that the responses were mediated by the activation of nociceptors. The

3 434 KAWAMATA ET AL. Fig. 1. Schematic diagrams of in vivo patch-clamp recordings from the substantia gelatinosa (SG) and identification of SG neurons and surgical incision. (A) Left, the spinal cord is exposed, and the superficial dorsal gray matter lateral to the L4 dorsal root entry zone is discernible as a relatively translucent band under Lissaner s tract (gray zone). The pia-arachnoid membrane was cut to make a window to penetrate the patch electrode in the spinal cord. Right, Schematic drawing depicting an electrode in the transverse plane. The electrode was advanced into the SG at an angle of 30 to 45. (B) Location of a recorded cell that was identified by an intracellular injection of biocytin. The soma is located in the SG, and dendrites expand dorsally and ventrally. (C) Schematic drawings of a 1-cm-long incision and wound closures by using skin staplers. A 1-cm-long line, to be incised, was drawn in the most sensitive region of a receptive field. Air-puff and pinch stimuli were applied 1 to 2 mm from the line in the most sensitive site of the receptive field. After determination of basal responses, a 1-cm-long incision was made on the marked line through the skin, fascia, and muscle of the hindquarter, and then the wound was closed with two skin staples. series of stimuli (air-puff stimulus and pinching stimulus) were applied several times at 1-min intervals. Both nonnoxious and noxious stimuli were applied to the RF of each neuron on the hindquarter. It has been reported that SG neurons can be classified as several types of neurons according to their response properties of EPSPs and action potentials (APs) to mechanical stimuli on the RF. Neurons are classified as multireceptive if they exhibit APs in response to nonnoxious stimuli and responded maximally to noxious stimuli (fig. 2A), and this type of neurons has been described previously in the superficial dorsal horn by others Neurons are classified as nociceptive if they respond only to noxious pinch stimuli (fig. 2B). Neurons are classified as subthreshold neurons if they respond to air-puff stimuli and pinch stimuli with small depolarizations that fail to reach AP threshold (fig. 2C). The amplitudes of EPSPs evoked by pinch stimuli were higher than those evoked by air-puff stimuli in these neurons examined in the present study. These functionally silent neurons also have been described in the SG. 28 Neurons were classed as light touch if they responded maximally to nonnoxious brush stimuli. 28 Light-touch neurons also fired APs in response to pinch; however, these responses were restricted mostly to the beginning and end of pinch stimuli and were qualitatively similar to the corresponding brush responses (fig. 2D). Consequently, these responses have been interpreted as responses to the initial touch contact of the forceps during pinching, consistent with previous observations. 29 In the current study, nociceptive, multireceptive, and subthreshold neurons were used. However, light-touch neurons were not used in the present study because these neurons were located deeply (approximately 120 m from the dorsal surface of the spinal cord), that is, possibly located in lamina III, and because we could not completely distinguish these neurons from lamina III neurons, which are involved in nonnoxious but not noxious sensory information, with respect to their responses to mechanical stimuli. Experimental Protocol In the current-clamp mode, after obtaining basal data of stimuli-induced changes in voltages of SG neurons, a 1-cm-long incision was made on the marked line with a number 11 blade through the skin in the center of the RF area of the hindquarter with care taken to prevent dam-

4 SUBSTANTIA GELATINOSA NEURONS AFTER INCISION 435 Fig. 2. Voltage responses from four different neurons during application of air-puff stimuli (left trace) and pinch stimuli (right trace). Bars above the traces show the duration of the stimulation. Substantia gelatinosa (SG) neurons exhibit several response profiles during nonnoxious and noxious mechanical stimuli. (A) Multireceptive neurons exhibited depolarizations in response to nonnoxious air-puff stimuli and noxious pinch stimuli. These neurons were more sensitive to pinch stimuli than air-puff stimuli. (B) Nociceptive neurons responded maximally (fired action potentials) to pinch stimuli with or without subthreshold depolarizations during air-puff stimuli. (C) subthreshold neurons responded to air-puff stimuli and pinch stimuli with small depolarizations that failed to reach action potential threshold. (D) Light-touch neurons responded maximally to air-puff stimuli. These neurons also responded to pinch stimuli, but action potentials were restricted to the beginning and end of pinch stimuli. age to superficial veins and nerves in the muscle (fig. 1C). The underlying muscle was incised longitudinally to a depth of 3 to 5 mm from the surface of the fascia of the muscle. The skin was apposed with two skin clips by a Visistat (Teleflex Medical Research Triangle Park, NC). Spontaneous activity was recorded in the current clamp mode before and until 30 min after the incision had been made, when behavioral hyperalgesia and increased responsiveness of deep dorsal horn neurons were maximally developed. 6 Nonnoxious and noxious stimuli then were applied to the same sites as those stimulated before the incision. Some animals were given an intravenous injection of 2 mg/kg lidocaine (Astra Japan, Tokyo, Japan). Spontaneous activity and responses to nonnoxious and noxious stimuli then were recorded 5 min after the administration of lidocaine. Lidocaine was dissolved in 0.9% saline and adjusted to a concentration of 3 g/ l. Data Analysis The air puff stimuli and pinch stimuli were applied at least three times before and after the incision and after administration of lidocaine. Spontaneous firing rates were determined by averaging the activity over 5-min periods when there was no contact with the RF. To evaluate the effects of the surgical incision on evoked activities of SG neurons, rates of APs to air-puff and pinch stimuli were subtracted from spontaneous firing rates; the subtracted rates of APs before and after the incision and after systemic administration of lidocaine were compared by one-way analyses of variance with Scheffé test and paired t tests for differences from the control values (preincision values) and from the values at 30 min after the incision. Some of the variables are expressed as percentages of control values (preincision values). All numerical data are expressed as means

5 436 KAWAMATA ET AL. Table 1. Physiology of Neurons Tested Cell Type SEM. P values of less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Results No. of Cells Cell Location ( m) V R (mv) Input Resistance (M ) Multireceptive Nociceptive Subthreshold Cells were classified as multireceptive, nociceptive, or subthreshold neurons (see text). Cell location was determined as the distance between the electrode tip and the surface of the spinal cord. V R resting potential. An animal preparation could be maintained in a stable condition for more than 10 h, comparable with the previous experimental state. 21 Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were made from 39 SG neurons. Although stable recording was obtained from a single neuron for up to 3 h, 11 neurons were lost during incision and wound closure, and 10 neurons were lost within 30 min after the incision had been made. As a result, stable recordings could be maintained in 18 neurons over a period of 30 min after the incision. Data obtained from these 18 neurons thus was analyzed in the current study. All neurons studied had membrane potentials more negative than 55 mv. The number of neurons, depths of cell location, membrane potentials, and input membrane resistances are shown in table 1. RFs of all neurons examined in the current study were located on the shaved skin of the hairy hindquarter (lumbar and gluteal regions of the rat). Spontaneous Activity and Evoked Responses of SG Neurons to Nonnoxious and Noxious Stimuli before and after Incision In the voltage clump mode (holding voltage, 70 mv), the mean amplitude and frequency of spontaneous EPSCs were pa and Hz, respectively, and both noxious (pinch) and nonnoxious (airpuff) stimuli applied to the RF of hairy skin elicited a barrage of EPSCs in all of the neurons examined in the present study (data not shown), consistent with results of previous studies. 21,23 In the current clamp mode, none of the neurons showed any spontaneous APs before the incision had been made. A barrage of APs was observed in all multireceptive neurons and nociceptive neurons during the incision and clipping of the skin (fig. 3A). Mean rates of APs during the incision and wound closure were and in multireceptive neurons (n 8) and nociceptive neurons (n 5), respectively. Occurrence of APs disappeared immediately after wound closure had been completed, and spontaneous APs were not subsequently seen in most multireceptive neurons (75%; 6/8 neurons) and nociceptive neurons (80%; 4/5 neurons). In two multireceptive neurons (25%; 2/8 neurons) and one nociceptive neuron (20%; 1/5 neurons), spontaneous AP firing was observed after the incision; mean rates of spontaneous APs were and Hz at 15 and 30 min, respectively, after the incision had been made. Responses of multireceptive neurons to nonnoxious and noxious stimuli and those of nociceptive neurons to noxious stimuli greatly increased after the incision had been made (fig. 3, B and C). The mean rates of APs evoked by pinch stimuli in multireceptive neurons significantly increased (P 0.05; fig. 3D). The mean rates of APs evoked by pinch stimuli in nociceptive neurons also significantly increased after the incision had been made (P 0.05; fig. 3D), and most nociceptive neurons (60%; 3/5 neurons) began to respond to nonnoxious stimuli. The incision and wound closure elicited a barrage of EPSPs in subthreshold neurons (n 5); however, the EPSCs did not reach AP thresholds and occurrence of APs was not seen during and after the incision in any subthreshold neurons (fig. 4A). In the subthreshold neurons, nonnoxious and noxious stimuli did not evoke APs before or after the incision had been made (fig. 4, B and C). Effects of Systemic Administration of Lidocaine on Increased Activity of SG Neurons after Incision The effect of intravenous administration of lidocaine (2 mg/kg) was evaluated in five multireceptive neurons, including one neuron with sustained spontaneous AP firing after the incision, and in three nociceptive neurons. Administration of lidocaine abolished sustained spontaneous AP firing (fig. 5A) and suppressed the increased responses of the multireceptive neurons and nociceptive neurons to nonnoxious and noxious stimuli (P 0.05; fig. 5, B and C). Discussion Changes in Spontaneous Activity and Evoked Responsiveness of SG Neurons after Incision Spontaneous pain seems to be present in an incision model, but the magnitude of spontaneous pain is not as great as that of other types of persistent pain models. 2,4 Spontaneous activities of dorsal horn neurons located in deep laminae, including lamina V, increased immediately after the incision and suturing in hairy skin of the rat and returned to the preincision levels within 2 h after the incision in the majority of neurons. 6 In the present study, AP firing ceased just after completion of the incision and wound closure in most multireceptive and

6 SUBSTANTIA GELATINOSA NEURONS AFTER INCISION 437 Fig. 3. (A) A typical time course of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) and action potentials (APs) in the most multireceptive neurons (75%; 6/8 neurons) and nociceptive neurons (80%; 4/5 neurons) before, during, and after incision and wound closure with staples (S). The incision and wound closure elicited EPSPs with a barrage of APs, but occurrence of APs disappeared immediately after the wound closure had been completed, and spontaneous APs were not seen subsequently. (B) An example of multireceptive neurons in response to air-puff stimuli and pinch stimuli before (Pre) and after the incision had been made (Incision). (C) An example of nociceptive neurons in response to air-puff stimuli and pinch stimuli before (Pre) and after the incision had been made (Incision). (D) Mean rates of APs in response to air-puff stimuli and pinch stimuli in multireceptive neurons (upper panels) and in nociceptive neurons (lower panels) before (Pre) and after the incision had been made (Incision). * P < 0.05 versus preincision value. nociceptive SG neurons (77%; 10/13 neurons), and spontaneous AP firing was observed only in 23% of the neurons (3/13 neurons) 30 min after the incision had been made. The relatively low incidence of neurons with spontaneous AP firing after the incision may reflect the relatively small magnitude of spontaneous pain-related behavior in the incision model. 2,4 In the present study, most nociceptive SG neurons (60%; 3/5 neurons) began to respond to nonnoxious air-puff stimuli after the incision, suggesting functional conversion of nociceptive neurons to multireceptive neurons. In contrast, high-threshold dorsal horn neurons located mainly in deep laminae (more than 400 m from the dorsal surface of the cord) did not respond to nonnoxious stimuli after a similar incision in our previous study, whereas these neurons were capable of responding to nonnoxious stimuli by reversal of -aminobutyric acid mediated inhibition. 6 Low-threshold mechanoreceptive A -fibers terminate mainly in laminae III V, whereas A -mechanical nociceptors terminate in laminae I and V, and C-fiber nociceptors terminate in laminae I and II. 25 Thus, high-threshold neurons located in deep laminae (laminae IV V) may receive inputs from A fibers and A -fibers, these inputs being inhibited by -aminobutyric acid mediated interneurons in the spinal cord in normal conditions. Incision injury may not reduce activity of the interneurons, and high-threshold neurons do not respond to nonnoxious stimuli after incision. However, it has been reported that the threshold of sensitized A - and C-fibers to stimuli by using von Frey filaments after incision injury in glabrous skin was reduced to 28 mn and that most of these small fibers responded to brush stimuli, 27 although it should be pointed out that physiologic characteristics of hairy skin and glabrous skin are different, especially after tissue injury. Thus, responses of nociceptive SG neurons to air-puff stimuli used in the present study might have been elicited through sensitized A - and C-fibers. The results suggest that nociceptive SG neurons, but not

7 438 KAWAMATA ET AL. Fig. 4. (A) An example of typical time courses of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in subthreshold neurons (100%; 5/5 neurons) before, during, and after incision and wound closure with staples (S). The incision and wound closure elicited a barrage of EPSPs but did not produce action potentials (APs). Occurrence of spontaneous APs was not observed in any subthreshold neurons (100%; 5/5 neurons) before, during, or after the incision had been made. (B) An example of subthreshold neurons in response to air-puff stimuli and pinch stimuli before (Pre) and after the incision had been made (Incision). (C) Firing rates of APs evoked by nonnoxious and noxious stimuli before and after the incision had been made. high-threshold neurons located in deep laminae, 6 may be responsible for behavioral allodynia seen in the incision model. It has been reported that mechanoinsensitive A -fibers and C-fibers, but not A -fibers, were sensitized after plantar incision and that approximately 40% of the A fibers and C-fibers showed spontaneous firings. 30 Posttraumatic injection of bupivacaine into the incised site abolished spontaneous activities of the sensitized primary afferents 30 and dorsal horn neurons located in deep laminae. 11 Taken together, the results of the present study suggest that the increased spontaneous activity of SG neurons also was dependent on excessive afferent inputs from the injured site but not on activity of SG neurons per se. However, if subthreshold SG neurons receive inputs mainly from these mechanoinsensitive A -fibers and C-fibers and if this explains why subthreshold neurons are functionally silent, some subthreshold SG neurons should begin to respond to noxious stimuli after incisional injury. However, this was not the case in the present study; none of subthreshold SG neurons (n 5) exerted any APs to mechanical stimuli after the 1-cm-long incision had been made. All of subthreshold SG neurons exerted large EPSCs with high frequency evoked by pinch stimuli ( pa, Hz), most of which were suppressed by application of tetrodotoxin (0.5 M) in Krebs s solution (data not shown), suggesting that subthreshold SG neurons receive inputs from mechanosensitive A -fibers and C-fibers. We recently showed that spontaneous IP- SCs with high frequency (77 45 Hz) and large amplitude (47 26 pa) were observed in approximately 40% of SG neurons and that the high-frequency and largeamplitude IPSCs were at least in part caused by tonic spontaneous excitation of descending inhibitory pathways from supraspinal sites, which synapse on SG neurons. 31 Thus, subthreshold SG neurons, which are thought to be functionally silent, may be a result of great tonic influence through the descending inhibitory systems from supraspinal sites. If so, it is likely that these subthreshold SG neurons are functional when the descending inhibition is disrupted, 31 and surgical incision may not affect the inhibitory influence on SG neurons. Effects of Systemic Lidocaine on Hyperexcitability of SG Neurons after Incision Injury Although mechanisms of enhanced sensitivity to pain (allodynia and hyperalgesia) in postoperative pain are thought to differ from those in other types of tissue injury-induced pain, 2,11 13 systemic administration of lidocaine has been shown to relieve postoperative pain in a clinical setting We also have shown that systemic

8 SUBSTANTIA GELATINOSA NEURONS AFTER INCISION 439 Fig. 5. (A) An example of the effect of systemic administration of lidocaine on spontaneously occurring action potentials (APs). In two of eight multireceptive neurons and in one of five nociceptive neurons, spontaneous APs were seen after incision and wound closure with staples (S). Immediately after systemic administration of lidocaine (2 mg/kg; arrow), the spontaneous APs ceased and were not subsequently seen. (B) Typical examples of responses to nonnoxious and noxious stimuli before (Pre) and after (Incision) the incision had been made and at 5 min after systemic administration of 2 mg/kg lidocaine (Lidocaine). (C) Changes in rates of APs in response to nonnoxious air-puff stimuli and noxious pinch stimuli before (Pre) and after (Incision) the incision had been made and at 5 min after systemic administration of 2 mg/kg lidocaine (Lidocaine). *# P < 0.05 versus preincision value and postincision value at 30 min after the incision had been made, respectively. administration of lidocaine suppresses primary and secondary hyperalgesia after an experimental small incision in humans. 35 In the present study, systemic administration of 2 mg/kg of lidocaine abolished spontaneous AP firing and suppressed increased responsiveness after the incision in multireceptive and nociceptive SG neurons. It is thus likely that spontaneous AP firing in SG neurons originates from the injured site and that systemic administration of lidocaine exerts its reversing effect on increased responsiveness of SG neurons after incision. Previous studies demonstrated little effect of systemically administered lidocaine on normal pain thresholds but demonstrated profound effects on acute painful conditions after tissue injury induced by application of chemical irritants. 36,37 Furthermore, it has been reported that intraplantar injection of a quaternary derivative of lidocaine, QX-314, after the initial phase after hind-paw injection of formalin abolished persistent phase 2 pain nociceptive behaviors. 38 The results suggest that persistent activity in peripheral afferent fibers during phase 2 is required for the persistent pain evoked by formalin, 38 because in contrast to lidocaine, which rapidly crosses cell membranes, QX-314 does not easily penetrate the blood brain barrier and has only peripheral sites of action. 39,40 Because the number of neurons examined in the present study was relatively small, further study is required to determine the mechanisms underlying the suppressive effects of systemic administration of lidocaine on hyperexcitation of SG neurons after incision. Only data obtained in the current clamp mode were analyzed in the present study. Neuronal excitability results from balance between excitatory synapse transmission and inhibitory synapse transmission. Using in vivo patch-clamp recording, IPSCs and EPSCs are recorded in the same neurons by altering holding potential. For example, nonnoxious mechanical stimuli elicit both IPSCs and EPSCs in SG neurons, whereas noxious stimuli evoke a persistent barrage of EPSCs, but not IPSCs. 21,29 These

9 440 KAWAMATA ET AL. results suggest that nonnoxious mechanical stimuli applied to the skin reduce noxious mechanical transmission in the SG by eliciting a barrage of IPSCs. If the inhibitory inputs to SG neurons are lost, as was described in previous reports after nerve injury, 20 SG neurons will be excited in response to nonnoxious stimuli, possibly resulting in allodynia. Thus, the in vivo patchclamp technique is a good tool to investigate changes in balance between excitatory and inhibitory synapse transmission in SG neurons in a postoperative pain state. Further study using in vivo patch-clamp recording thus is required to obtain insights into the mechanisms of postoperative pain, focusing on analysis of changes in EPSCs and IPSCs of SG neurons after incision injury. In conclusion, the results of the present study using in vivo patch-clamp recording suggest that SG neurons show different changes in properties after surgical incision depending on classification of SG neurons and that systemic administration of lidocaine at a relatively low dose (2 mg/kg) can abolish sustained occurrence of APs originating from the injured site and can reverse increased responsiveness of nonnoxious and noxious stimuli. The authors thank Shigekazu Sugino, M.D., and Tomoyuki Kawamata, M.D. (Department of Anesthesiology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan), and Takafumi Ninomiya, B.S., Ph.D. (Department of Anatomy, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan), for their help in data analysis and identifying SG neurons using intracellular injection of biocytin. References 1. Kehlet H, Holte K: Effect of postoperative analgesia on surgical outcome. Br J Anaesth 2001; 87: Brennan TJ, Zahn PK, Pogatzki-Zahn EM: Mechanisms of incisional pain. Anesthesiol Clin North Am 2005; 23: Mantyh PW: A mechanism based understanding of cancer pain. Pain 2002; 96: Brennan TJ, Vandermeulen EP, Gebhart GF: Characterization of a rat model of incisional pain. Pain 1996; 64: Pogatzki EM, Raja SN: A mouse model of incisional pain. ANESTHESIOLOGY 2003; 99: Kawamata M, Koshizaki M, Shimada SG, Narimatsu E, Kozuka Y, Takahashi T, Namiki A, Collins JG: Changes in response properties and receptive fields of spinal dorsal horn neurons in rats after surgical incision in hairy skin. ANESTHESI- OLOGY 2005; 102: Duarte AM, Pospisilova E, Reilly E, Mujenda F, Hamaya Y, Strichartz GR: Reduction of postincisional allodynia by subcutaneous bupivacaine: Findings with a new model in the hairy skin of the rat. ANESTHESIOLOGY 2005; 103: Simone DA, Sorkin LS, Oh U, Chung JM, Owens C, LaMotte RH, Willis WD: Neurogenic hyperalgesia: Central neural correlates in responses of spinothalamic tract neurons. J Neurophysiol 1991; 66: Hoheisel U, Mense S: Long-term changes in discharge behavior of cat dorsal horn neurons following stimulation of deep tissue. Pain 1989; 36: Woolf CJ, King AE: Dynamic alterations in the cutaneous mechanoreceptive fields of dorsal horn neurons in the rat spinal cord. J Neurosci 1990; 10: Pogatzki EM, Vandermeulen EP, Brennan TJ: Effects of plantar local anesthetic injection on dorsal horn neuron activity and pain behaviors caused by incision. Pain 2002; 97: Zahn PK, Pogatzki-Zahn EM, Brennan TJ: Spinal administration of MK-801 and NBQX demonstrates NMDA-independent dorsal horn sensitization in incision pain. Pain 2005; 114: Zahn PK, Brennan TJ,: Incision-induced changes in receptive field properties of rat dorsal horn neurons. ANESTHESIOLOGY 1999; 91: Light AR, Perl ER: Re-examination of the dorsal root projection to the spinal dorsal horn including observations on the differential termination of coarse and fine fibers. J Comp Neurol 1979; 186: Cervero F, Iggo A: The substantia gelatinosa of the spinal cord. A critical review. Brain 1980; 103: Eckert WA, 3rd McNaughton KK, Light AR: Morphology and axonal arborization of rat spinal inner lamina II neurons hyperpolarized by mu-opioidselective agonists. J Comp Neurol 2003; 458: Yoshimura M: Slow synaptic transmission in the spinal dorsal horn. Prog Brain Res 1996; 113: Nakatsuka T, Park JS, Kumamoto E, Tamaki T, Yoshimura M: Plastic changes in sensory inputs to rat substantia gelatinosa neurons following peripheral inflammation. Pain 1999; 82: Okamoto M, Baba H, Goldstein PA, Higashi H, Shimoji K, Yoshimura M: Functional reorganization of sensory pathways in the rat spinal dorsal horn following peripheral nerve injury. J Physiol 2001; 532: Furue H, Katafuchi T, Yoshimura M: Sensory processing and functional reorganization of sensory transmission under pathological conditions in the spinal dorsal horn. Neurosci Res 2004; 48: Furue H, Narikawa K, Kumamoto E, Yoshimura M: Responsiveness of rat substantia gelatinosa neurones to mechanical but not thermal stimuli revealed by in vivo patch-clamp recording. J Physiol 1999; 521: Zimmermann M: Ethical guidelines for investigations of experimental pain in conscious animals. Pain 1983; 16: Sonohata M, Furue H, Katafuchi T, Yasaka T, Doi A, Kumamoto E, Yoshimura M: Actions of noradrenaline on substantia gelatinosa neurons in the rat spinal cord revealed by in vivo patch recording. J Physiol 2004; 555: Yoshimura M, Nishi S: Blind patch-clamp recordings from substantia gelatinosa neurons in adult rat spinal cord slices: Pharmacological properties of synaptic currents. Neuroscience 1993; 53: Woolf CJ, Fitzgerald M: The properties of neurones recorded in the superficial dorsal horn of the rat spinal cord. J Comp Neurol 1983; 221: Rethelyi M, Light AR, Perl ER: Synaptic ultrastructure of functionally and morphologically characterized neurons of the superficial spinal dorsal horn of cat. J Neurosci 1989; 9: Light AR, Willcockson HH: Spinal laminae I-II neurons in rat recorded in vivo in whole cell, tight seal configuration: properties and opioid responses. J Neurophysiol 1999; 82: Graham BA, Brichta AM, Callister RJ: In vivo responses of mouse superficial dorsal horn neurones to both current injection and peripheral cutaneous stimulation. J Physiol 2004; 561: Narikawa K, Furue H, Kumamoto E, Yoshimura M: In vivo patch-clamp analysis of IPSCs evoked in rat substantia gelatinosa neurons by cutaneous mechanical stimulation. J Neurophysiol 2000; 84: Pogatzki EM, Gebhart GF, Brennan TJ: Characterization of Adelta- and C-fibers innervating the plantar rat hindpaw one day after an incision. J Neurophysiol 2002; 87: Kozuka Y, Kawamata M, Narimatsu E, Niiya T, Namiki A: Plasticity of superficial dorsal horn neurons after acute spinal cord hemisection in rats by analysis using in vivo whole-cell patch-clamp recording (abstract). ANESTHESIOLOGY 2005; 103:A Bartlett EE, Hutserani O: Xylocaine for the relief of postoperative pain. Anesth Analg 1961; 40: Cassuto J, Wallin G, Hogstrom S, Faxen A, Rimback G: Inhibition of postoperative pain by continuous low-dose intravenous infusion of lidocaine. Anesth Analg 1985; 64: Koppert W, Weigand M, Neumann F, Sittl R, Schuettler J, Schmelz M, Hering W: Perioperative intravenous lidocaine has preventive effects on postoperative pain and morphine consumption after major abdominal surgery. Anesth Analg 2004; 98: Kawamata M, Takahashi T, Kozuka Y, Nawa Y, Nishikawa K, Narimatsu E, Watanabe H, Namiki A: Experimental incision-induced pain in human skin: Effects of systemic lidocaine on flare formation and hyperalgesia. Pain 2002; 100: Abram SE, Yaksh TL: Systemic lidocaine blocks nerve injury-induced hyperalgesia and nociceptor-driven spinal sensitization in the rat. ANESTHESIOLOGY 1994; 80: Puig S, Sorkin LS: Formalin-evoked activity in identified primary afferent fibers: systemic lidocaine suppresses phase-2 activity. Pain 1996; 64: Taylor BK, Peterson MA, Basbaum AI: Persistent cardiovascular and behavioral nociceptive responses to subcutaneous formalin require peripheral nerve input. J Neurosci 1995; 15: Omana-Zapata I, Khabbaz MA, Hunter JC, Bley KR: QX-314 inhibits entopic nerve activity associated with neuropathic pain. Brain Res 1997; 771: Kawamata M, Takahashi T, Narimatsu E, Niiya T, Namiki A: Effects of systemic administration of lidocaine and QX-314 on hyperexcitability of spinal dorsal horn neurons after incision in the rat (abstract). ANESTHESIOLOGY 2005; 103:A1483

Peripheral nerve injury alters excitatory synaptic transmission in lamina II of the rat dorsal horn

Peripheral nerve injury alters excitatory synaptic transmission in lamina II of the rat dorsal horn J Physiol (2003), 548.1, pp. 131 138 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.036186 The Physiological Society 2003 www.jphysiol.org Peripheral nerve injury alters excitatory synaptic transmission in lamina II of the

More information

Pharmacology of Pain Transmission and Modulation

Pharmacology of Pain Transmission and Modulation Pharmacology of Pain Transmission and Modulation 2 Jürg Schliessbach and Konrad Maurer Nociceptive Nerve Fibers Pain is transmitted to the central nervous system via thinly myelinated Aδ and unmyelinated

More information

From preemptive to preventive analgesia Esther M. Pogatzki-Zahn and Peter K. Zahn

From preemptive to preventive analgesia Esther M. Pogatzki-Zahn and Peter K. Zahn From preemptive to preventive analgesia Esther M. Pogatzki-Zahn and Peter K. Zahn Purpose of review Much effort has been taken to prove that a treatment initiated before surgery is more effective in reducing

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Supplementary Figure 1 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary Figure 1 The supralinear events evoked in CA3 pyramidal cells fulfill the criteria for NMDA spikes, exhibiting a threshold, sensitivity to NMDAR blockade, and all-or-none

More information

211MDS Pain theories

211MDS Pain theories 211MDS Pain theories Definition In 1986, the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defined pain as a sensory and emotional experience associated with real or potential injuries, or described

More information

NMDA-Receptor Antagonists and Opioid Receptor Interactions as Related to Analgesia and Tolerance

NMDA-Receptor Antagonists and Opioid Receptor Interactions as Related to Analgesia and Tolerance Vol. 19 No. 1(Suppl.) January 2000 Journal of Pain and Symptom Management S7 Proceedings Supplement NDMA-Receptor Antagonists: Evolving Role in Analgesia NMDA-Receptor Antagonists and Opioid Receptor Interactions

More information

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURE AND MAINTENANCE OF NEURONS (a) (b) Dendrites Cell body Initial segment collateral terminals (a) Diagrammatic representation of a neuron. The break in

More information

Sensory Assessment of Regional Analgesia in Humans

Sensory Assessment of Regional Analgesia in Humans REVIEW ARTICLE Dennis M. Fisher, M.D., Editor-in-Chief Anesthesiology 2000; 93:1517 30 2000 American Society of Anesthesiologists, Inc. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. Sensory Assessment of Regional

More information

Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST)

Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST) Neurons of the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis (BNST) Electrophysiological Properties and Their Response to Serotonin DONALD G. RAINNIE a Harvard Medical School and Department of Psychiatry, Brockton

More information

Reasons for thinking so, according to von Frey:

Reasons for thinking so, according to von Frey: Reasons for thinking so, according to von Frey: The experiment consisted of sticking a pig bristle against the eye. Even with fairly light contact, the bristle was painful...... and a warm and cold bristle

More information

A Specific Inhibitory Pathway between Substantia Gelatinosa Neurons Receiving Direct C-Fiber Input

A Specific Inhibitory Pathway between Substantia Gelatinosa Neurons Receiving Direct C-Fiber Input 8752 The Journal of Neuroscience, September 24, 2003 23(25):8752 8758 Cellular/Molecular A Specific Inhibitory Pathway between Substantia Gelatinosa Neurons Receiving Direct C-Fiber Input Yan Lu and Edward

More information

Pain Pathways. Dr Sameer Gupta Consultant in Anaesthesia and Pain Management, NGH

Pain Pathways. Dr Sameer Gupta Consultant in Anaesthesia and Pain Management, NGH Pain Pathways Dr Sameer Gupta Consultant in Anaesthesia and Pain Management, NGH Objective To give you a simplistic and basic concepts of pain pathways to help understand the complex issue of pain Pain

More information

Supplementary Information

Supplementary Information Hyperpolarization-activated cation channels inhibit EPSPs by interactions with M-type K + channels Meena S. George, L.F. Abbott, Steven A. Siegelbaum Supplementary Information Part 1: Supplementary Figures

More information

Plastic changes in sensory inputs to rat substantia gelatinosa neurons following peripheral inflammation

Plastic changes in sensory inputs to rat substantia gelatinosa neurons following peripheral inflammation Pain 82 (1999) 39 47 Plastic changes in sensory inputs to rat substantia gelatinosa neurons following peripheral inflammation Terumasa Nakatsuka a,b, Jin-Soo Park a, Eiichi Kumamoto a, Tetsuya Tamaki b,

More information

Electrically silent neurons in substantia gelatinosa of the rat spinal cord

Electrically silent neurons in substantia gelatinosa of the rat spinal cord Fiziol Zh 2010, 56 (5), 4-9. Electrically silent neurons in substantia gelatinosa of the rat spinal cord Melnick I.V., Bogomoletz Institute of Physiology, Kiev, Ukraine Abstract Substantia gelatinosa (SG)

More information

Receptors and Neurotransmitters: It Sounds Greek to Me. Agenda. What We Know About Pain 9/7/2012

Receptors and Neurotransmitters: It Sounds Greek to Me. Agenda. What We Know About Pain 9/7/2012 Receptors and Neurotransmitters: It Sounds Greek to Me Cathy Carlson, PhD, RN Northern Illinois University Agenda We will be going through this lecture on basic pain physiology using analogies, mnemonics,

More information

CHAPTER 10 THE SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM

CHAPTER 10 THE SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM CHAPTER 10 THE SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM 10.1. SOMATOSENSORY MODALITIES "Somatosensory" is really a catch-all term to designate senses other than vision, hearing, balance, taste and smell. Receptors that could

More information

Somatosensory Physiology (Pain And Temperature) Richard M. Costanzo, Ph.D.

Somatosensory Physiology (Pain And Temperature) Richard M. Costanzo, Ph.D. Somatosensory Physiology (Pain And Temperature) Richard M. Costanzo, Ph.D. OBJECTIVES After studying the material of this lecture the student should be familiar with: 1. The relationship between nociception

More information

Neuroscience 201A (2016) - Problems in Synaptic Physiology

Neuroscience 201A (2016) - Problems in Synaptic Physiology Question 1: The record below in A shows an EPSC recorded from a cerebellar granule cell following stimulation (at the gap in the record) of a mossy fiber input. These responses are, then, evoked by stimulation.

More information

Proceedings of the World Small Animal Veterinary Association Sydney, Australia 2007

Proceedings of the World Small Animal Veterinary Association Sydney, Australia 2007 Proceedings of the World Small Animal Sydney, Australia 2007 Hosted by: Next WSAVA Congress REDUCING THE PAIN FACTOR AN UPDATE ON PERI-OPERATIVE ANALGESIA Sandra Forysth, BVSc DipACVA Institute of Veterinary,

More information

Chapter 4 Neuronal Physiology

Chapter 4 Neuronal Physiology Chapter 4 Neuronal Physiology V edit. Pg. 99-131 VI edit. Pg. 85-113 VII edit. Pg. 87-113 Input Zone Dendrites and Cell body Nucleus Trigger Zone Axon hillock Conducting Zone Axon (may be from 1mm to more

More information

Pathophysiology of Pain

Pathophysiology of Pain Pathophysiology of Pain Wound Inflammatory response Chemical mediators Activity in Pain Path PAIN http://neuroscience.uth.tmc.edu/s2/chapter08.html Chris Cohan, Ph.D. Dept. of Pathology/Anat Sci University

More information

Somatic Sensation (MCB160 Lecture by Mu-ming Poo, Friday March 9, 2007)

Somatic Sensation (MCB160 Lecture by Mu-ming Poo, Friday March 9, 2007) Somatic Sensation (MCB160 Lecture by Mu-ming Poo, Friday March 9, 2007) Introduction Adrian s work on sensory coding Spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia Four somatic sense modalities Touch Mechanoreceptors

More information

Mechanism of Pain Production

Mechanism of Pain Production Mechanism of Pain Production Pain conducting nerve fibers are small myelinated (A-delta) or unmyelinated nerve fibers (C-fibers). Cell bodies are in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) or sensory ganglia of

More information

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon?

Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon? Supplementary information to: Is action potential threshold lowest in the axon? Maarten H. P. Kole & Greg J. Stuart Supplementary Fig. 1 Analysis of action potential (AP) threshold criteria. (a) Example

More information

Prolonged Synaptic Integration in Perirhinal Cortical Neurons

Prolonged Synaptic Integration in Perirhinal Cortical Neurons RAPID COMMUNICATION Prolonged Synaptic Integration in Perirhinal Cortical Neurons JOHN M. BEGGS, 1 JAMES R. MOYER, JR., 1 JOHN P. MCGANN, 2 AND THOMAS H. BROWN 1 3 1 Department of Psychology, 2 Interdepartmental

More information

Sensory coding and somatosensory system

Sensory coding and somatosensory system Sensory coding and somatosensory system Sensation and perception Perception is the internal construction of sensation. Perception depends on the individual experience. Three common steps in all senses

More information

Dendrites Receive impulse from the axon of other neurons through synaptic connection. Conduct impulse towards the cell body Axon

Dendrites Receive impulse from the axon of other neurons through synaptic connection. Conduct impulse towards the cell body Axon Dendrites Receive impulse from the axon of other neurons through synaptic connection. Conduct impulse towards the cell body Axon Page 22 of 237 Conduct impulses away from cell body Impulses arise from

More information

Pathophysiology of Pain. Ramon Go MD Assistant Professor Anesthesiology and Pain medicine NYP-CUMC

Pathophysiology of Pain. Ramon Go MD Assistant Professor Anesthesiology and Pain medicine NYP-CUMC Pathophysiology of Pain Ramon Go MD Assistant Professor Anesthesiology and Pain medicine NYP-CUMC Learning Objectives Anatomic pathway of nociception Discuss the multiple target sites of pharmacological

More information

What it Takes to be a Pain

What it Takes to be a Pain What it Takes to be a Pain Pain Pathways and the Neurophysiology of pain Dennis S. Pacl, MD, FACP, FAChPM Austin Palliative Care/ Hospice Austin A Definition of Pain complex constellation of unpleasant

More information

Pain. Pain. Pain: One definition. Pain: One definition. Pain: One definition. Pain: One definition. Psyc 2906: Sensation--Introduction 9/27/2006

Pain. Pain. Pain: One definition. Pain: One definition. Pain: One definition. Pain: One definition. Psyc 2906: Sensation--Introduction 9/27/2006 Pain Pain Pain: One Definition Classic Paths A new Theory Pain and Drugs According to the international Association for the Study (Merskey & Bogduk, 1994), Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience

More information

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE BMP-218 November 4, 2014 DIVISIONS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The nervous system is composed of two primary divisions: 1. CNS - Central Nervous System (Brain + Spinal Cord)

More information

Yan-Ping Chen, Shao-Rui Chen, and Hui-Lin Pan

Yan-Ping Chen, Shao-Rui Chen, and Hui-Lin Pan 0022-3565/05/3152-696 703$20.00 THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS Vol. 315, No. 2 Copyright 2005 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 91314/3054541

More information

Introduction to some interesting research questions: Molecular biology of the primary afferent nociceptor

Introduction to some interesting research questions: Molecular biology of the primary afferent nociceptor Introduction to some interesting research questions: Molecular biology of the primary afferent nociceptor NOCICEPTORS ARE NOT IDENTICAL PEPTIDE SubP/CGRP Trk A NON-PEPTIDE IB4 P2X 3 c-ret Snider and McMahon

More information

Enhanced formalin nociceptive responses following L5 nerve ligation in the rat reveals neuropathy-induced inflammatory hyperalgesia

Enhanced formalin nociceptive responses following L5 nerve ligation in the rat reveals neuropathy-induced inflammatory hyperalgesia University of Kentucky From the SelectedWorks of Renee R. Donahue 2001 Enhanced formalin nociceptive responses following L5 nerve ligation in the rat reveals neuropathy-induced inflammatory hyperalgesia

More information

The Nervous System. Nervous System Functions 1. gather sensory input 2. integration- process and interpret sensory input 3. cause motor output

The Nervous System. Nervous System Functions 1. gather sensory input 2. integration- process and interpret sensory input 3. cause motor output The Nervous System Nervous System Functions 1. gather sensory input 2. integration- process and interpret sensory input 3. cause motor output The Nervous System 2 Parts of the Nervous System 1. central

More information

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline

Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline Chapter 11 Introduction to the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter Outline Module 11.1 Overview of the Nervous System (Figures 11.1-11.3) A. The nervous system controls our perception and experience

More information

Introduction to Neurobiology

Introduction to Neurobiology Biology 240 General Zoology Introduction to Neurobiology Nervous System functions: communication of information via nerve signals integration and processing of information control of physiological and

More information

The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine (January 2018) Vol. 70 (12), Page

The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine (January 2018) Vol. 70 (12), Page The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine (January 2018) Vol. 70 (12), Page 2172-2177 Blockage of HCN Channels with ZD7288 Attenuates Mechanical Hypersensitivity in Rats Model of Diabetic Neuropathy Hussain

More information

Pain Mechanisms. Prof Michael G Irwin MD, FRCA, FANZCA FHKAM Head Department of Anaesthesiology University of Hong Kong. The Somatosensory System

Pain Mechanisms. Prof Michael G Irwin MD, FRCA, FANZCA FHKAM Head Department of Anaesthesiology University of Hong Kong. The Somatosensory System ain Mechanisms rof Michael G Irwin MD, FRCA, FANZCA FHKAM Head Department of Anaesthesiology University of Hong Kong The Somatosensory System Frontal cortex Descending pathway eriaqueductal gray matter

More information

Seizure: the clinical manifestation of an abnormal and excessive excitation and synchronization of a population of cortical

Seizure: the clinical manifestation of an abnormal and excessive excitation and synchronization of a population of cortical Are There Sharing Mechanisms of Epilepsy, Migraine and Neuropathic Pain? Chin-Wei Huang, MD, PhD Department of Neurology, NCKUH Basic mechanisms underlying seizures and epilepsy Seizure: the clinical manifestation

More information

10.1: Introduction. Cell types in neural tissue: Neurons Neuroglial cells (also known as neuroglia, glia, and glial cells) Dendrites.

10.1: Introduction. Cell types in neural tissue: Neurons Neuroglial cells (also known as neuroglia, glia, and glial cells) Dendrites. 10.1: Introduction Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cell types in neural tissue: Neurons Neuroglial cells (also known as neuroglia, glia, and glial

More information

Chapter 16. Sense of Pain

Chapter 16. Sense of Pain Chapter 16 Sense of Pain Pain Discomfort caused by tissue injury or noxious stimulation, and typically leading to evasive action important /// helps to protect us lost of pain in diabetes mellitus = diabetic

More information

SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEMS

SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEMS SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEMS Schematic diagram illustrating the neural pathways that convey somatosensory information to the cortex and, subsequently, to the motor system. Double arrows show reciprocal connections.

More information

Supporting Online Material for

Supporting Online Material for www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/325/5941/760/dc1 Supporting Online Material for Spinal Endocannabinoids and CB 1 Receptors Mediate C-Fiber Induced Heterosynaptic Pain Sensitization Alejandro J. Pernía-Andrade,

More information

Electrical Properties of Neurons. Steven McLoon Department of Neuroscience University of Minnesota

Electrical Properties of Neurons. Steven McLoon Department of Neuroscience University of Minnesota Electrical Properties of Neurons Steven McLoon Department of Neuroscience University of Minnesota 1 Neuronal Communication Neurons communicate with other cells, often over long distances. The electrical

More information

Rewiring of hindlimb corticospinal neurons after spinal cord injury

Rewiring of hindlimb corticospinal neurons after spinal cord injury Rewiring of hindlimb corticospinal neurons after spinal cord injury Arko Ghosh, Florent Haiss, Esther Sydekum, Regula Schneider, Miriam Gullo, Matthias T. Wyss, Thomas Mueggler, Christof Baltes, Markus

More information

Chapter 17 Nervous System

Chapter 17 Nervous System Chapter 17 Nervous System 1 The Nervous System Two Anatomical Divisions Central Nervous System (CNS) Brain and Spinal Cord Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) Two Types of Cells Neurons Transmit nerve impulses

More information

Supporting Online Material for

Supporting Online Material for www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/317/5841/183/dc1 Supporting Online Material for Astrocytes Potentiate Transmitter Release at Single Hippocampal Synapses Gertrudis Perea and Alfonso Araque* *To whom

More information

Spinal Cord Injury Pain. Michael Massey, DO CentraCare Health St Cloud, MN 11/07/2018

Spinal Cord Injury Pain. Michael Massey, DO CentraCare Health St Cloud, MN 11/07/2018 Spinal Cord Injury Pain Michael Massey, DO CentraCare Health St Cloud, MN 11/07/2018 Objectives At the conclusion of this session, participants should be able to: 1. Understand the difference between nociceptive

More information

Clarke's Column Neurons as the Focus of a Corticospinal Corollary Circuit. Supplementary Information. Adam W. Hantman and Thomas M.

Clarke's Column Neurons as the Focus of a Corticospinal Corollary Circuit. Supplementary Information. Adam W. Hantman and Thomas M. Clarke's Column Neurons as the Focus of a Corticospinal Corollary Circuit Supplementary Information Adam W. Hantman and Thomas M. Jessell Supplementary Results Characterizing the origin of primary

More information

What is Pain? An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage. Pain is always subjective

What is Pain? An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage. Pain is always subjective Pain & Acupuncture What is Pain? An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage. NOCICEPTION( the neural processes of encoding and processing noxious stimuli.)

More information

Dynamic Alterations in the Cutaneous Mechanoreceptive Fields of Dorsal Horn Neurons in the Rat Spinal Cord

Dynamic Alterations in the Cutaneous Mechanoreceptive Fields of Dorsal Horn Neurons in the Rat Spinal Cord The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1990, fo(6): 2717-2726 Dynamic Alterations in the Cutaneous Mechanoreceptive Fields of Dorsal Horn Neurons in the Rat Spinal Cord C. J. Woolf and A. E. King Department

More information

Chapter Nervous Systems

Chapter Nervous Systems The Nervous System Chapter Nervous Systems Which animals have nervous systems? (Which do not) What are the basic components of a NS? What kind of fish performs brain operations? What differentiates one

More information

Synaptic Integration

Synaptic Integration Synaptic Integration 3 rd January, 2017 Touqeer Ahmed PhD Atta-ur-Rahman School of Applied Biosciences National University of Sciences and Technology Excitatory Synaptic Actions Excitatory Synaptic Action

More information

Chapter 7. The Nervous System: Structure and Control of Movement

Chapter 7. The Nervous System: Structure and Control of Movement Chapter 7 The Nervous System: Structure and Control of Movement Objectives Discuss the general organization of the nervous system Describe the structure & function of a nerve Draw and label the pathways

More information

Department of Neurology/Division of Anatomical Sciences

Department of Neurology/Division of Anatomical Sciences Spinal Cord I Lecture Outline and Objectives CNS/Head and Neck Sequence TOPIC: FACULTY: THE SPINAL CORD AND SPINAL NERVES, Part I Department of Neurology/Division of Anatomical Sciences LECTURE: Monday,

More information

Chapter 7. Objectives

Chapter 7. Objectives Chapter 7 The Nervous System: Structure and Control of Movement Objectives Discuss the general organization of the nervous system Describe the structure & function of a nerve Draw and label the pathways

More information

Nervous system. The main regulation mechanism of organism's functions

Nervous system. The main regulation mechanism of organism's functions Nervous system The main regulation mechanism of organism's functions Questions Neuron The reflex arc The nervous centers Properties of the nervous centers The general principles of coordination Inhibition

More information

Modulation of Local Reflexes During Centrally Commanded Movements

Modulation of Local Reflexes During Centrally Commanded Movements Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University Biology Theses Department of Biology Spring 4-26-2013 Modulation of Local Reflexes During Centrally Commanded Movements Uzma H. Tahir Georgia

More information

Materials and Methods

Materials and Methods Anesthesiology 2004; 100:1258 62 2004 American Society of Anesthesiologists, Inc. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. Spinal Adenosine Receptor Activation Reduces Hypersensitivity after Surgery by a Different

More information

Effects of Palonosetron, a 5-HT3 Receptor Antagonist, on Mechanical Allodynia in a Rat Model of Postoperative Pain

Effects of Palonosetron, a 5-HT3 Receptor Antagonist, on Mechanical Allodynia in a Rat Model of Postoperative Pain Original Article Korean J Pain 2013 April; Vol. 26, No. 2: 125-129 pissn 2005-9159 eissn 2093-0569 http://dx.doi.org/10.3344/kjp.2013.26.2.125 Effects of Palonosetron, a 5-HT3 Receptor Antagonist, on Mechanical

More information

Physiology of Tactile Sensation

Physiology of Tactile Sensation Physiology of Tactile Sensation Objectives: 1. Describe the general structural features of tactile sensory receptors how are first order nerve fibers specialized to receive tactile stimuli? 2. Understand

More information

Ivy/Neurogliaform Interneurons Coordinate Activity in the Neurogenic Niche

Ivy/Neurogliaform Interneurons Coordinate Activity in the Neurogenic Niche Ivy/Neurogliaform Interneurons Coordinate Activity in the Neurogenic Niche Sean J. Markwardt, Cristina V. Dieni, Jacques I. Wadiche & Linda Overstreet-Wadiche Supplementary Methods. Animals We used hemizygous

More information

Ube3a is required for experience-dependent maturation of the neocortex

Ube3a is required for experience-dependent maturation of the neocortex Ube3a is required for experience-dependent maturation of the neocortex Koji Yashiro, Thorfinn T. Riday, Kathryn H. Condon, Adam C. Roberts, Danilo R. Bernardo, Rohit Prakash, Richard J. Weinberg, Michael

More information

Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons. Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire

Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons. Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire Chapter 45: Synapses Transmission of Nerve Impulses Between Neurons Chad Smurthwaite & Jordan Shellmire The Chemical Synapse The most common type of synapse used for signal transmission in the central

More information

The development of the nociceptive responses in neurokinin-1 receptor knockout mice

The development of the nociceptive responses in neurokinin-1 receptor knockout mice SOMATENSORY SYSTEMS, PAIN The development of the nociceptive responses in neurokinin-1 receptor knockout mice Tamara E. King, 1,CA Mark J. S. Heath, 2 Pierre Debs, 3 Marion B. E. Davis, 2 Rene Hen 4 and

More information

Lidocaine inhibits neurite growth in mouse dorsal root ganglion cells in culture

Lidocaine inhibits neurite growth in mouse dorsal root ganglion cells in culture Lidocaine inhibits neurite growth in mouse dorsal root ganglion cells in culture 3 Hiromi ~iruma', Hiroshi ~ aru~ama~, Zyun'ici B. Simada, Takashi Katakural, Sumio ~ oka~, Toshifumi ~akenaka~ and Tadashi

More information

Brian Kahan, D.O. FAAPMR, DABPM, DAOCRM, FIPP Center for Pain Medicine and Physiatric Rehabilitation 2002 Medical Parkway Suite 150 Annapolis, MD

Brian Kahan, D.O. FAAPMR, DABPM, DAOCRM, FIPP Center for Pain Medicine and Physiatric Rehabilitation 2002 Medical Parkway Suite 150 Annapolis, MD Brian Kahan, D.O. FAAPMR, DABPM, DAOCRM, FIPP Center for Pain Medicine and Physiatric Rehabilitation 2002 Medical Parkway Suite 150 Annapolis, MD 1630 Main Street Suite 215 Chester, MD 410-571-9000 www.4-no-pain.com

More information

What is Anatomy and Physiology?

What is Anatomy and Physiology? Introduction BI 212 BI 213 BI 211 Ecosystems Organs / organ systems Cells Organelles Communities Tissues Molecules Populations Organisms Campbell et al. Figure 1.4 Introduction What is Anatomy and Physiology?

More information

AANA Journal Course 2

AANA Journal Course 2 AANA Journal Course 2 Update for Nurse Anesthetists Preemptive analgesia applied to postoperative pain management Dede A. Farris, CRNA, MSNA Birmingham, Alabama Michael A. Fiedler, CRNA, MS Memphis, Tennessee

More information

Opiates distinguish spinal excitation from inhibition evoked by noxious heat stimuli in the rat: relevance to theories of analgesia

Opiates distinguish spinal excitation from inhibition evoked by noxious heat stimuli in the rat: relevance to theories of analgesia Br. J. Pharmacol. (1988), 94, 185-191 Opiates distinguish spinal excitation from inhibition evoked by noxious heat stimuli in the rat: relevance to theories of analgesia 1N.C. Harris & 2R.W. Ryall Department

More information

LONG-TERM postoperative pain follows many common

LONG-TERM postoperative pain follows many common Prolonged Suppression of Postincisional Pain by a Slow-release Formulation of Lidocaine Chi-Fei Wang, M.D.,* Carlo Pancaro, M.D., Peter Gerner, M.D., Gary Strichartz, Ph.D. ABSTRACT Background: Postoperative

More information

doi: /brain/awr345 Brain 2012: 135;

doi: /brain/awr345 Brain 2012: 135; doi:10.1093/brain/awr345 Brain 2012: 135; 359 375 359 BRAIN A JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY Reduced conduction failure of the main axon of polymodal nociceptive C-fibres contributes to painful diabetic neuropathy

More information

Somatic Sensory System I. Background

Somatic Sensory System I. Background Somatic Sensory System I. Background A. Differences between somatic senses and other senses 1. Receptors are distributed throughout the body as opposed to being concentrated at small, specialized locations

More information

Update on the Neurophysiology of Pain Transmission and Modulation: Focus on the NMDA-Receptor

Update on the Neurophysiology of Pain Transmission and Modulation: Focus on the NMDA-Receptor S2 Journal of Pain and Symptom Management Vol. 19 No. 1(Suppl.) January 2000 Proceedings Supplement NMDA-Receptor Antagonists: Evolving Role in Analgesia Update on the Neurophysiology of Pain Transmission

More information

AKA a painful lecture by Colleen Blanchfield, MD Full Circle Neuropsychiatric Wellness Center

AKA a painful lecture by Colleen Blanchfield, MD Full Circle Neuropsychiatric Wellness Center A lecture on PAIN AKA a painful lecture by Colleen Blanchfield, MD Full Circle Neuropsychiatric Wellness Center 1 Overview of the lecture Anatomy of the Pain Tract How a painful stimulus travels from the

More information

Transmission Efficacy and Plasticity in Glutamatergic Synapses Formed by Excitatory Interneurons of the Substantia Gelatinosa in the Rat Spinal Cord

Transmission Efficacy and Plasticity in Glutamatergic Synapses Formed by Excitatory Interneurons of the Substantia Gelatinosa in the Rat Spinal Cord Transmission Efficacy and Plasticity in Glutamatergic Synapses Formed by Excitatory Interneurons of the Substantia Gelatinosa in the Rat Spinal Cord Sónia F. A. Santos 1,2 *, Liliana L. Luz 1,2, Peter

More information

Relation across the Receptor.afferent in a Tonic Electroreceptor of Marine Catfish

Relation across the Receptor.afferent in a Tonic Electroreceptor of Marine Catfish No. 6] Proc. Japan Acad., 51 (1975) 485 102. Input. output Synapses Relation across the Receptor.afferent in a Tonic Electroreceptor of Marine Catfish By Shun-ichi UMEKITA, Yoshiko SUGAWARA, and Shosaku

More information

Supporting Information

Supporting Information ATP from synaptic terminals and astrocytes regulates NMDA receptors and synaptic plasticity through PSD- 95 multi- protein complex U.Lalo, O.Palygin, A.Verkhratsky, S.G.N. Grant and Y. Pankratov Supporting

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary Figure 1. Normal AMPAR-mediated fepsp input-output curve in CA3-Psen cdko mice. Input-output curves, which are plotted initial slopes of the evoked fepsp as function of the amplitude of the

More information

HEAD AND NECK PART 2

HEAD AND NECK PART 2 HEAD AND NECK PART 2 INTEGRATED CURRICULUM = Integrate Basic Science and Clinical Training 1- ENT PATIENT EXAM IN ICS COURSE - Today and next week - Review/Preview Anatomy underlying ENT exam 2- NEUROANATOMY/NEUROLOGY

More information

Chapter 11: Nervous System and Nervous Tissue

Chapter 11: Nervous System and Nervous Tissue Chapter 11: Nervous System and Nervous Tissue I. Functions and divisions of the nervous system A. Sensory input: monitor changes in internal and external environment B. Integrations: make decisions about

More information

Mechanisms for the Anti-nociceptive Actions of the Descending Noradrenergic and Serotonergic Systems in the Spinal Cord

Mechanisms for the Anti-nociceptive Actions of the Descending Noradrenergic and Serotonergic Systems in the Spinal Cord J Pharmacol Sci 101, 000 000 (2006) Journal of Pharmacological Sciences 2006 The Japanese Pharmacological Society Critical Review Mechanisms for the Anti-nociceptive Actions of the Descending Noradrenergic

More information

The anatomy and physiology of pain

The anatomy and physiology of pain The anatomy and physiology of pain Charlotte E Steeds Abstract Pain is an unpleasant experience that results from both physical and psychological responses to injury. A complex set of pathways transmits

More information

ANAT2010. Concepts of Neuroanatomy (II) S2 2018

ANAT2010. Concepts of Neuroanatomy (II) S2 2018 ANAT2010 Concepts of Neuroanatomy (II) S2 2018 Table of Contents Lecture 13: Pain and perception... 3 Lecture 14: Sensory systems and visual pathways... 11 Lecture 15: Techniques in Neuroanatomy I in vivo

More information

Nervous System. Master controlling and communicating system of the body. Secrete chemicals called neurotransmitters

Nervous System. Master controlling and communicating system of the body. Secrete chemicals called neurotransmitters Nervous System Master controlling and communicating system of the body Interacts with the endocrine system to control and coordinate the body s responses to changes in its environment, as well as growth,

More information

5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons

5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons 5-Nervous system II: Physiology of Neurons AXON ION GRADIENTS ACTION POTENTIAL (axon conduction) GRADED POTENTIAL (cell-cell communication at synapse) SYNAPSE STRUCTURE & FUNCTION NEURAL INTEGRATION CNS

More information

In Vitro Analog of Operant Conditioning in Aplysia

In Vitro Analog of Operant Conditioning in Aplysia The Journal of Neuroscience, March 15, 1999, 19(6):2261 2272 In Vitro Analog of Operant Conditioning in Aplysia. II. Modifications of the Functional Dynamics of an Identified Neuron Contribute to Motor

More information

RECENT ADVANCES IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF ACUTE PAIN

RECENT ADVANCES IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF ACUTE PAIN Br. J. Anaesth. (1989), 63, 139-146 RECENT ADVANCES IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF ACUTE PAIN C. J. WOOLF The peripheral receptors of the sensory systems have transduction mechanisms that ensure maximal sensitivity

More information

Paclitaxel induces acute pain via directly activating toll like receptor 4

Paclitaxel induces acute pain via directly activating toll like receptor 4 Yan et al. Molecular Pain (2015) 11:10 DOI 10.1186/s12990-015-0005-6 MOLECULAR PAIN RESEARCH Paclitaxel induces acute pain via directly activating toll like receptor 4 Open Access Xisheng Yan 1,2, Dylan

More information

Chapter 7 Nerve Cells and Electrical Signaling

Chapter 7 Nerve Cells and Electrical Signaling Chapter 7 Nerve Cells and Electrical Signaling 7.1. Overview of the Nervous System (Figure 7.1) 7.2. Cells of the Nervous System o Neurons are excitable cells which can generate action potentials o 90%

More information

Neural Control of Lower Urinary Tract Function. William C. de Groat University of Pittsburgh Medical School

Neural Control of Lower Urinary Tract Function. William C. de Groat University of Pittsburgh Medical School Neural Control of Lower Urinary Tract Function William C. de Groat University of Pittsburgh Medical School Disclosures Current funding: NIH Grants, DK093424, DK-091253, DK-094905, DK-090006. Other financial

More information

ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF NEURONS. AP Biology Chapter 48

ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF NEURONS. AP Biology Chapter 48 ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF NEURONS AP Biology Chapter 48 Objectives Describe the different types of neurons Describe the structure and function of dendrites, axons, a synapse, types of ion channels, and

More information

by mapping the spinal cord in the rostro-caudal axis while recording cord dorsum

by mapping the spinal cord in the rostro-caudal axis while recording cord dorsum J. Physiol. (1984), 357, pp. 357-368 357 With 8 text-figures Printed in Great Britain DORSAL ROOT POTENTIALS ARE UNCHANGED IN ADULT RATS TREATED AT BIRTH WITH CAPSAICIN BY F. CERVERO AND M. B. PLENDERLEITH

More information

Module H NERVOUS SYSTEM

Module H NERVOUS SYSTEM Module H NERVOUS SYSTEM Topic from General functions of the nervous system Organization of the nervous system from both anatomical & functional perspectives Gross & microscopic anatomy of nervous tissue

More information

EDUCATION M.D., Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China, 1999 B.S., Beijing University, College of Life Science, Beijing, China, 1994

EDUCATION M.D., Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China, 1999 B.S., Beijing University, College of Life Science, Beijing, China, 1994 CHAO MA, M.D. Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, 333 Cedar Street, TMP3, New Haven, CT 06510, USA. Phone: 203-785-3522 (O), 203-606-7959 (C), Fax: 203-737-1528, Email: chao.ma@yale.edu

More information

EE 791 Lecture 2 Jan 19, 2015

EE 791 Lecture 2 Jan 19, 2015 EE 791 Lecture 2 Jan 19, 2015 Action Potential Conduction And Neural Organization EE 791-Lecture 2 1 Core-conductor model: In the core-conductor model we approximate an axon or a segment of a dendrite

More information

Activity Dependent Changes At the Developing Neuromuscular Junction

Activity Dependent Changes At the Developing Neuromuscular Junction Activity Dependent Changes At the Developing Neuromuscular Junction (slides 16, 17 and 18 have been slightly modified for clarity) MCP Lecture 2-3 9.013/7.68 04 Neuromuscular Junction Development 1. Muscle

More information