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. 2010 Jun 25;477(3):153-6.
doi: 10.1016/j.neulet.2010.04.053. Epub 2010 Apr 29.

Sex and hormonal variations in the development of at-level allodynia in a rat chronic spinal cord injury model

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Sex and hormonal variations in the development of at-level allodynia in a rat chronic spinal cord injury model

Charles H Hubscher et al. Neurosci Lett. .

Abstract

The development of central neuropathic pain varies among patients with spinal cord injury (SCI). The factors contributing to the development and perpetuation of segmental pain (at-level allodynia) has been the focus of ongoing experiments in our laboratory. One such factor is hormonal status. We have shown previously, using a male rat model of SCI, that a severe contusion injury is necessary for the development of allodynia in trunk regions at and just above the level of a T8 injury. In this study, we examined at-level sensitivity for SCI ovariectomized (ovx) and cycling female rats as well as for SCI males implanted with either a placebo pellet or one that slowly releases 17beta-estradiol. The proportion of ovx SCI female rats and placebo-treated SCI males displaying pain-like behaviors to touch/pressure of at-level dermatomes up to 6 weeks post-injury (67% and 75%, respectively) was similar to our previous studies on SCI males (69%). In contrast, significantly fewer cycling SCI female rats and 17beta-estradiol treated SCI male rats showed sensitivity to touch at-level (26% and 30%, respectively). These results implicate 17beta-estradiol as a potential target that can readily be modulated to prevent segmental pain following SCI.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Lesion Epicenters - Typical lesion epicenters from three rats with pain-like responses to touch/pressure at-level. The cross-section to the left is from an ovariectomized female (mean five-week allodynia score of 5.0; 224 Kdyn impactor force), the middle section is from a placebo-treated male (mean allodynia score of 7.0; 221 Kdyn), and the section to the right is from an estradiol-treated male (mean allodynia score of 6.8; 216 Kdyn). The sections were stained with both luxol fast blue (indicates the presence of myelin) and cresyl violet (to stain Nissl substance in nervous tissue).

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