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Article Dans Une Revue The Journal of Pain Année : 2009

Differentiating thermal allodynia and hyperalgesia using dynamic hot and cold plate in rodents

Résumé

In animal studies, thermal sensitivity is mostly evaluated on the basis of nociceptive reaction latencies in response to a given thermal aversive stimulus. However, these techniques may be inappropriate to differentiate allodynia from hyperalgesia or to provide information differentiating the activation of nociceptor subtypes. The recent development of dynamic hot and cold plates, allowing computer-controlled ramps of temperature, may be useful for such measures. In this study, we characterized their interest for studying thermal nociception in freely moving mice and rats. We showed that escape behavior (jumps) was the most appropriate parameter in C57Bl/6J mice, whereas nociceptive response was estimated by using the sum of paw lickings and withdrawals in Sprague-Dawley rats. We then demonstrated that this procedure allows the detection of both thermal allodynia and hyperalgesia after peripheral pain sensitization with capsaicin in mice and in rats. In a condition of carrageenan-induced paw inflammation, we observed the previously described thermal hyperalgesia, but we also revealed that rats exhibit a clear thermal allodynia to a cold or a hot stimulus. These results demonstrate the interest of the dynamic hot and cold plate to study thermal nociception, and more particularly to study both thermal allodynia and hyperalgesia within a single paradigm in awake and freely moving rodents. Perspective
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Dates et versions

hal-00399549 , version 1 (26-06-2009)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-00399549 , version 1
  • PUBMED : 19409860

Citer

Ipek Yalcin, Alexandre Charlet, Marie José Freund-Mercier, Michel Barrot, Pierrick Poisbeau. Differentiating thermal allodynia and hyperalgesia using dynamic hot and cold plate in rodents. The Journal of Pain, 2009, 10 (7), pp.767-773. ⟨hal-00399549⟩

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