Journal article

Above-level mechanical hyperalgesia in rats develops after incomplete spinal cord injury but not after cord transection, and is reversed by amitriptyline, morphine and gabapentin

VS Densmore, A Kalous, JR Keast, PB Osborne

Pain | Published : 2010

Abstract

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a major cause of persistent neuropathic pain of central origin. Recent evidence suggests neuropathic pain in clinically complete SCI patients correlates with limited sensory function below the lesion (sensory discomplete). On this basis we examined if the onset of mechanical hyperalgesia was different in rodents after a severe incomplete clip-compression SCI versus a complete spinal cord transection at thoracic segment T13. Above-level withdrawal behaviors evoked by forepaw stimulation provided evidence of mechanical hyperalgesia after incomplete but not complete SCI, whereas below-level responses evoked by hindpaw stimulation revealed hypersensitivity after both ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers