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Effects of intrathecal lidocaine on hyperalgesia and allodynia following chronic constriction injury in rats
Authors:Jie Tian  Yiwen Gu  Diansan Su  Yichao Wu  Xiangrui Wang
Affiliation:1. Department of Anesthesiology, Renji Hospital, Medical School of Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai, China;2. CBR Institute for Biomedical Research, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Abstract:The present study investigated the effects of different doses of intrathecal lidocaine on established thermal hyperalgesia and tactile allodynia in the chronic constriction injury model of neuropathic pain, defined the effective drug dose range, the duration of pain‐relief effects, and the influence of this treatment on the body and tissues. Male Sprague–Dawley rats were divided into five groups and received intrathecal saline or lidocaine (2, 6.5, 15, and 35mg/kg) 7 days after loose sciatic ligation. Respiratory depression and hemodynamic instability were found to become more severe as doses of lidocaine increased during intrathecal therapy. Two animals in the group receiving 35mg/kg lidocaine developed pulmonary oedema and died. Behavioral tests indicated that 6.5, 15, and 35mg/kg intrathecal lidocaine showed different degrees of reversal of thermal hyperalgesia, and lasted for 2–8 days, while 2mg/kg lidocaine did not. The inhibition of tactile allodynia was only observed in rats receiving 15 and 35mg/kg lidocaine, and the anti‐allodynic effects were identical in these two groups. Histopathologic examinations on the spinal cords revealed mild changes in rats receiving 2–15mg/kg lidocaine. However, lesions were severe after administration of 35mg/kg lidocaine. These findings indicate that intrathecal lidocaine has prolonged therapeutic effects on established neuropathic pain. The balance between sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous activities could be well preserved in most cases, except for 35mg/kg. Considering the ratio between useful effects and side effects, doses of 15mg/kg are suitable for intrathecal injection for relief of neuropathic pain.
Keywords:Intrathecal lidocaine  Neuropathic pain  Thermal hyperalgesia  Tactile allodynia  Chronic constriction injury
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