PAIN
Volume 151, Issue 2 , Pages 447-459, November 2010

Increased excitability and spontaneous activity of rat sensory neurons following in vitro stimulation of sympathetic fiber sprouts in the isolated dorsal root ganglion

  • Wenrui Xie
  • ,
  • Judith A. Strong
  • ,
  • Jun-Ming Zhang

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Department of Anesthesiology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 231 Albert Sabin Way, P.O. Box 670531, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0531, USA. Tel.: +1 513 558 2427; fax: +1 513 558 0995.

Pain Research Center, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0531, USA

Received 15 December 2009; received in revised form 3 August 2010; accepted 4 August 2010. published online 30 August 2010.

Abstract 

Many chronic pain conditions including complex regional pain syndrome are exacerbated by sympathetic activity. In animal models, sympathetic fibers sprout into the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) after peripheral nerve injury, forming abnormal connections with sensory neurons. However, functional studies of sympathetic-sensory connections have been limited largely to in vivo studies. This study describes a new method for studying sympathetic-sensory connections in an isolated whole DRG preparation in the rat spinal nerve ligation (SNL) model. Three days after ligation of the ventral ramus of the spinal nerve (SNL), sympathetic fibers sprouting into the DRG were observed to originate largely in the intact dorsal ramus of the spinal nerve, which at the lumbar level is a small branch of the spinal nerve separating from the ventral ramus near the intervertebral foramen. In whole DRG isolated 3days after SNL, microelectrode recordings of sensory neurons showed that repeated stimulation of the dorsal ramus enhanced spontaneous activity in large and medium diameter neurons and reduced rheobase in large neurons. These effects, which were slow and long lasting, were attributed to stimulation of the sympathetic sprouts because: stimulation had no effect in uninjured DRG; and effects could be reduced or eliminated by a “cocktail” of antagonists of norepinephrine and ATP receptors, by pretreatment with the sympathetic release blocker bretylium, or by pre-cutting the grey ramus through which sympathetic fibers coursed to the ligated DRG. The latter treatment, a relatively minimal form of sympathectomy, was also highly effective in reducing mechanical pain ipsilateral to the SNL.

Keywords: Sympathetic fibers, Complex regional pain syndrome, Neuropathy, Sprouting, Nerve injury, Dorsal root ganglion

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PII: S0304-3959(10)00474-4

doi:10.1016/j.pain.2010.08.006

PAIN
Volume 151, Issue 2 , Pages 447-459, November 2010