Abstract

Hormone replacement remains one of the common therapies for menopause-related pain but is associated with risk of orofacial or back pain. Spinal endomorphin-2 (EM-2) is involved in varied pain and its release is steroid-dependent, but whether increasing spinal EM-2 can inhibit thermal hyperalgesia and inflammatory pain in ovariectomized (OVX) female rats, an animal model mimicking menopause, is not clear, nor is the potential involvement of spinal mu-opioid receptor (MOR). In the current study, we revealed that the temporal decrease of spinal EM-2 is accompanied with OVX-induced thermal hyperalgesia that was dose-dependently attenuated by intrathecal (IT) delivery of EM-2. The subcutaneous injection of formalin-induced inflammatory pain in OVX rats was exacerbated and IT delivery of EM-2 dose-dependently inhibited the inflammatory pain. However, the ED50 for IT delivery of EM-2 on thermal hyperalgesia is smaller than that on inflammatory pain in OVX rats, suggesting different contributions of the EM-2 system to these 2 pain modalities in OVX rats. IT pretreatment with MOR antagonist, beta-funaltrexamine (ß-FNA), attenuated IT EM-2 analgesia on both thermal hyperalgesia and inflammatory pain in OVX rats. Furthermore, IT delivery of EM-2 did not affect the animals’ locomotion or anxiety status. Our findings suggested that IT EM-2 might be a safer analgesia strategy than hormone replacement therapy in reducing risk of orofacial or back pain. However, a long-lasting form of EM-2 with less tolerance is needed to induce sustained analgesia.

Details

Title
Different Analgesic Effects of Intrathecal Endomorphin-2 on Thermal Hyperalgesia and Evoked Inflammatory Pain in Ovariectomized Rats
Author
Xiao-Hui, Zhao; Zhao, Ya-Qun; Zhu, Chao; Chen, Lei; Hu, Wei; Zhang, Ting; Yu-Lin, Dong; Sheng-Xi, Wu; Kaye, Alan David; Wang, Wen; Yun-Qing, Li
Pages
195-205
Section
Experimental Assessment
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physician
ISSN
15333159
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2655994135
Copyright
© 2015. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.