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Vol. 303, Issue 3, 1021-1028, December 2002
Department of Anesthesiology, Department of Neuroscience and
Anatomy, Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey,
Pennsylvania
Intrathecal
[D-Pen2,D-Pen5]-enkephalin
(DPDPE; a
-opioid agonist) has a profound antinociceptive effect in
neuropathic pain. Spinal nitric oxide (NO) has been implicated in the
analgesic effect of several G protein-coupled receptor agonists.
Little, however, is known about the role of spinal NO in the inhibitory effect of DPDPE on spinal dorsal horn neurons. In the present study, we
determined the role of NO in the inhibitory effect of DPDPE on
ascending dorsal horn neurons in normal rats and in a rat model of
diabetic neuropathic pain. Single-unit activity of ascending dorsal
horn neurons was recorded in anesthetized rats. The responses of dorsal
horn neurons to graded mechanical stimuli and von Frey filaments were
determined before and after local spinal application of 0.1 to 5 µM
DPDPE. The influence of an NO synthase inhibitor,
1-(2-trifluoromethylphenyl) imidazole (TRIM; 30 µM), on the effect of
DPDPE was then studied in separate groups of dorsal horn neurons in
normal and diabetic rats. DPDPE inhibited the response of dorsal horn
neurons in both normal and diabetic rats in a concentration-dependent
fashion. The inhibitory effect of 1 µM DPDPE was abolished by 1 µM
naltrindole, a
-opioid antagonist. Furthermore, the inhibitory
effect of DPDPE on the evoked response of dorsal horn neurons was
largely eliminated by TRIM in normal and diabetic rats. These data
suggest that DPDPE has a profound inhibitory effect on dorsal horn
neurons in normal and diabetic rats. Spinal endogenous NO is essential
for the inhibitory effect of DPDPE on ascending dorsal horn neurons in
both normal and diabetic rats.
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