Artículos de revistas
Effect of interleukin-1β on spinal cord nociceptive transmission of normal and monoarthritic rats after disruption of glial function
Fecha
2009Registro en:
Arthritis Research and Therapy, Volumen 11, Issue 4, 2018,
14786354
14786362
10.1186/ar2756
Autor
Constandil, Luis
Hernández, Alejandro
Pelissier Serrano, Teresa
Arriagada, Osvaldo
Espinoza, Karla
Burgos, Hector
Laurido, Claudio
Institución
Resumen
Introduction: Cytokines produced by spinal cord glia after peripheral injuries have a relevant role in the maintenance of pain states. Thus, while IL-1β is overexpressed in the spinal cords of animals submitted to experimental arthritis and other chronic pain models, intrathecal administration of IL-1β to healthy animals induces hyperalgesia and allodynia and enhances wind-up activity in dorsal horn neurons. Methods: To investigate the functional contribution of glial cells in the spinal cord nociceptive transmission, the effect of intrathecally administered IL-1β was studied in both normal and adjuvant-induced arthritic rats with or without glial inhibition. Four weeks after induction of monoarthritis, rats were treated with the glial cell inhibitor propentofylline (10 μg i.t. daily during 10 days) and submitted to a C-fiber-mediated reflex paradigm evoked by single and repetitive (wind-up) electric stimulation. Results: Both the propentofylline treatment and the monoarthritic conditi