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Title: Daily spinal cord stimulation suppresses autotomy behavior in rats following peripheral deafferentation. Author: Gao XX, Ren B, Linderoth B, Meyerson BA. Journal: Neuroscience; 1996 Nov; 75(2):463-70. PubMed ID: 8931010. Abstract: Autotomy in experimental animals following peripheral nerve section has been interpreted as a sign of pain corresponding to the chronic pain observed in patients with extensive nerve lesions. Such pain may be alleviated by spinal cord stimulation. In the present study, the effect of such stimulation, via chronically implanted electrodes, on autotomy behavior following sciatic nerve section was assessed in the rat. The stimulation was applied for 30 min daily during a 10-day period. There were four groups of animals, 16 in each, half of them females. Stimulating electrodes were implanted in all and one group served as control, receiving sham stimulation. In one group, the stimulation was started when autotomy was observed, one received stimulation from the day of nerve section, and in one it was begun three days before section. The onset of autotomy was significantly delayed in the latter two groups. When stimulation was applied as "treatment", autotomy ceased but reappeared after the 10-day stimulation period. The incidence and severity of autotomy was markedly delayed and reduced when the stimulation had been applied just after the nerve section or before. In the latter groups, the diminished degree of autotomy persisted for the entire observation period, lasting 60 days after the stimulation was stopped. It seems that spinal cord stimulation, albeit applied only once daily and during a limited time period, can protect the spinal cord from developing the state of hyperexcitability believed to be the major cause of autotomy behavior. Peripheral mechanisms may also play a role by the antidromic activity evoked by the stimulation in the sectioned peripheral nerve. This study shows that spinal cord stimulation, which is a commonly employed method for treating chronic neurogenic pain, may have long-lasting effects on plasticity changes in the spinal cord following peripheral nerve injury, even when the stimulation is applied for short periods of time.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]