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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Local anesthetics ; Spinal cord ; Ischemia Pain ; Tocainide
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the present study we examined the effect of systemic tocainide on sensory hypersensitivity in rats after spinal cord ischemia induced by a photochemical technique. After induction of spinal cord ischemia the rats exhibited a sensory disturbance which was mainly expressed as vocalization to innocuous cutaneous mechanical stimuli (allodynia) in the flank area during the following several days. Tocainide at 75 mg/kg i.p., but not 50 mg/kg i.p., significantly increased the vocalization threshold to mechanical pressure for 2 h. The effect of intraarterial (i.a.) tocainide on the responses of dorsal horn wide-dynamic-range (WDR) neurons to suprathreshold electrical stimulation of their receptive fields was also examined in normal rats and after transient spinal cord ischemia, at a time when the animals exhibited typical behavioral allodynia in the dermatomes innervated by the ischemic spinal segments. In normal rats, tocainide (50 mg/kg i.a.) strongly suppressed the responses of WDR neurons to C fiber input with lesser effect on A fiber input. In allodynic rats, tocainide suppressed the augmented A and C fiber mediated responses of WDR neurons to the extent that their responses were similar to those seen in normal rats without tocainide. There was no difference in the overall depression of A and C fiber mediated input by tocainide between normal and allodynic rats. The present results demonstrated the analgesic effect of systemic tocainide in relieving allodynia in rats and indicated that systemic local anesthetics, at doses that do not block nerve conduction, can be effective in suppressing dorsal horn WDR neuronal activity. Although such drugs primarily suppress C fiber induced activity, the depression by local anesthetics of increased A fiber induced responses in allodynic conditions mediated by myelinated afferents may explain the analgesic effect of such drugs on behavior.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Key words Phonotactic threshold ; Juvenile hormone III ; Allatectomy ; Environmental influences ; Auditory interneuron
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Juvenile hormone III (JHIII), when applied to the abdomen of 1-day-old female Acheta domesticus (in quantities that would create JHIII titers in the hemolymph that were within the range measured in females of this species) caused a significant decrease in phonotactic thresholds (Fig. 1). Removal of the corpora allata from 5-day-old females with low phonotactic thresholds caused significantly increased phonotactic thresholds 2–5 days later. After a temporary increase (24 h) of, on average, about 25 dB, the phonotactic thresholds drop to about 10 dB above preallatectomy levels (Fig. 2), but remain significantly higher than controls. Application of JHIII to allatectomized females, with a mean increase in thresholds of 20 dB, results in significantly decreased thresholds (mean of about 20 dB) over the next 6 h (Fig. 3). Exposure to males 1 week before the imaginal molt causes the phonotactic thresholds of postimaginal females to drop 1–2 days significantly earlier than controls (Fig. 4). One- and 3-day-old females, phonotactically tested only once, exhibit lower thresholds in the early morning than they do in the late afternoon (Fig. 5). Five-day-old females do not exhibit such a diurnal rhythm. Phonotactically testing females more than once a day significantly influences their phonotactic thresholds (Figs. 6, 7). In 1-day-old females, with high (above 70 dB) phonotactic thresholds, the threshold of their L1 auditory interneurons can be 30 dB or more below their phonotactic threshold (Fig. 8). In females with phonotactic thresholds of 70 dB or lower, the L1 threshold is within 10 dB of their phonotactic threshold. Both JHIII and allatectomy influence phonotactic and L1 thresholds in a similar manner.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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