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Altered temporal pattern of mechanically evoked C-fiber activity in a model of diabetic neuropathy in the rat
Authors:Chen X  Levine J D
Institution:Departments of Anatomy, Medicine and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Division of Neuroscience, NIH Pain Center (University of California, San Francisco), C-522 Box 0440, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0440, USA.
Abstract:While enhanced nociceptor activity has been demonstrated in models of painful peripheral neuropathy, analyses of activity pattern, which could play a role in the symptoms experienced as well as help elucidate underlying mechanism, are still limited. We evaluated the pattern of C-fiber activity, in response to mechanical and chemical stimuli, in a rat model of diabetes induced by a pancreatic beta-cell toxin, streptozotocin (STZ). In diabetic rats the number of action potentials produced by threshold and suprathreshold (10 g) sustained (60 s) mechanical stimuli was elevated in approximately half of C-fibers. These high-firing C-fibers demonstrated a disproportionate increase in interspike intervals (ISIs) between 100 and 199 ms, compared with low-firing diabetic and control C-fibers. The co-efficient of variability (CV2), a frequency independent measure of ISI variability, was also greater in high-firing fibers, compared with control fibers. Unexpectedly, instantaneous frequency of the initial burst of activity during the first second was lower in high-firing fibers, even though the average frequency over the last 59 s was significantly higher. The number of action potentials evoked by a noxious chemical stimulus, 300 and 600 mM KCl, injected adjacent to the mechanical receptive field was also significantly increased in C-fibers from diabetic rats and mechanically high-firing fibers had more action potentials in response to KCl than control fibers and a disproportionate increase in ISIs between 100 and 199 ms for responses to chemical stimuli appeared only in mechanically high-firing C-fibers, compared with the mechanically low-firing diabetic or control C-fibers. There was, however, no corresponding change in CV2 or instantaneous frequency plots for the response to chemical stimulation in mechanically high-firing fibers, as there was in the response to mechanical stimulation. Our data demonstrate specific changes in firing pattern of high-firing C-fibers in the rat model of painful neuropathy produced by STZ-diabetes that might contribute to the symptoms experienced by patients.
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