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. 2005 Mar;93(3):1730-41.
doi: 10.1152/jn.00496.2004.

Striatal inhibition of nociceptive responses evoked in trigeminal sensory neurons by tooth pulp stimulation

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Striatal inhibition of nociceptive responses evoked in trigeminal sensory neurons by tooth pulp stimulation

Juan E Belforte et al. J Neurophysiol. 2005 Mar.
Free article

Abstract

The noxious evoked response in trigeminal sensory neurons was studied to address the role of striatum in the control of nociceptive inputs. In urethane-anesthetized rats, the jaw opening reflex (JOR) was produced by suprathreshold stimulation of the tooth pulp and measured as electromyographic response in the digastric muscle, with simultaneous recording of noxious responses in single unit neurons of the spinal trigeminal nucleus pars caudalis (Sp5c). The microinjection of glutamate (80 etamol/0.5 microl) into striatal JOR inhibitory sites significantly decreased the A delta and C fiber-mediated-evoked response (53 +/- 4.2 and 43.6 +/- 6.4% of control value, P < 0.0001) in 92% (31/34) of nociceptive Sp5c neurons. The microinjection of the solvent was ineffective, as was microinjection of glutamate in sites out of the JOR inhibitory ones. In another series of experiments, simultaneous single unit recordings were performed in the motor trigeminal nucleus (Mo5) and the Sp5c nucleus. Microinjection of glutamate decreased the noxious-evoked response in Sp5c and Mo5 neurons in parallel with the JOR, without modifying spontaneous neuronal activity of trigeminal motoneurons (n = 8 pairs). These results indicate that the striatum could be involved in the modulation of nociceptive inputs and confirm the role of the basal ganglia in the processing of nociceptive information.

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