Influence of surgical pain stress on the blood-brain barrier permeability in rats
- PMID: 14967192
- DOI: 10.1016/j.lfs.2003.07.054
Influence of surgical pain stress on the blood-brain barrier permeability in rats
Abstract
Effect of surgical pain stress on the blood-brain barrier permeability was investigated in rats. The animals were divided into four groups: Group 1: control, Group 2: immobilization stress, Group 3: acute hypertension, Group 4: immobilization stress + surgical pain stress. Bilateral hid paw surgical wounds for cannulations were applied in animals' inguinal regions under diethyl-ether anesthesia, then the animals were awaken from anesthesia to produce surgical pain stress. Evans-blue was used as a blood-brain barrier tracer. There is no significantly blood-brain barrier breakdown after short-time immobilization stress, but after adrenalin hypertension blood-brain barrier permeability was increased especially on frontal and occipital cortices in 50% of the animals. Surgical pain stress increased blood-brain barrier permeabiliy in comparison to acute adrenalin-induced hypertension (p < 0.01). In surgical pain stress-induced animals distinct Evans-blue leakage was observed in the occipital, frontal and parieto-temporal cortices.
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