Descending modulation of cardiac nociception by the rostral ventromedial medulla in rats.
- Author:
Na SUN
1
;
Lingheng KONG
;
Ligang NIU
;
Juanxia ZHU
;
Yan XU
;
Jianqing DU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Animals; Capsaicin; pharmacology; Electric Stimulation; Electromyography; drug effects; Male; Medulla Oblongata; physiology; Nociception; Nociceptors; drug effects; physiology; Pain; physiopathology; Pericardium; drug effects; physiology; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Sensory System Agents; pharmacology
- From: Journal of Southern Medical University 2013;33(11):1611-1614
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo observe the descending modulation of cardiac nociception by the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) in rats.
METHODSA rat model of cardiosomatic motor reflex (CMR) was established by injecting capsaicin into the pericardial sac to induce cardiac nociception, and the electromyogram (EMG) response of the dorsal spinotrapezius muscle was studied. The RVM was electrically stimulated (25, 75 and 100 µA) or destroyed to examine whether RVM exerted descending modulation on cardiac nociception.
RESULTSElectrical stimulation of the RVM at 8 sites produced intensity-dependent inhibition of EMG responses to noxious cardiac stimulus (F[2,21]=43.188, P=0.001). Electrical stimulation at 3 sites caused facilitated EMG responses, but the increased magnitude of the EMG was not dependent on stimulation intensity (F[2,6]=0.884, P=0.461). Stimulation at 11 sites produced biphasic effects: at a low intensity (25 µA), the elicited EMG magnitude was significantly larger than baseline (P<0.05), and at greater intensities (75/100 µA), the stimulation caused suppression of the EMG magnitude to a level significantly lower than the baseline (P<0.05). Electrolytic lesion of the RVM resulted in significantly increased EMG responses compared with the baseline and sham lesion group.
CONCLUSIONCardiac nociception evoked by capsaicin stimulation is subjected to descending biphasic modulation by the RVM, which produces predominantly descending inhibition on heart pain.