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Title: Electroacupuncture analgesia in naive rats: effects of brainstem and spinal cord lesions, and role of pituitary-adrenal axis. Author: Bossut DF, Mayer DJ. Journal: Brain Res; 1991 May 17; 549(1):52-8. PubMed ID: 1893253. Abstract: Recent studies have shown that analgesia is potentiated by naltrexone (NTX) and naloxone (NAL) pretreatment in rats exposed for the first time to electroacupuncture (EA). In the present study, we have investigated the role of the pituitary-adrenal axis and of brainstem and spinal cord structures in EA analgesia and its potentiation by NTX. The pituitary and adrenal glands do not participate in the production of EA analgesia, but may produce a non-opioid substance which interferes with the development of EA analgesia. Spinalization or dorsolateral funiculi lesions blocked EA analgesia, and intrathecal NTX had no effect. These results indicate that supraspinal structures are necessary to produce and potentiate EA analgesia. Contrary to their critical role in morphine and other models of environmentally produced analgesia nucleus raphe alatus and raphe structures dorsal to it are not necessary for the development of EA analgesia. These structures, however, may contain opiate synapses on which NTX may act as an agonist to potentiate analgesia. The various components which appear to participate in the production of EA analgesia imply a complex circuit of pain modulation systems and indicate that an organism can adapt to distinct environmental conditions with versatile means to avoid pain.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]