A Segmental Chronic Pain Syndrome in Rats Associated with
Intrathecal Infusion of NMDA: evidence for selective action
in the dorsal horn
Douglas W. Zochodne, Marilyn Murray, Sukriti Nag and Richard
J. Riopelle

Abstract:
We explored the effects of chronic lumbar intrathecal
NMDA infusion (mini-osmotic pumps) in Sprague-Dawley rats on
motor and sensory axon integrity. Several different infusion
protocols, each given over a 4 week period were examined: 0.15
M NMDA in phosphate buffered saline; phosphate buffered saline
without NMDA; and 0.20 M magnesium sulfate plus 0.15 M NMDA;
0.35 M NMDA. In two additional protocols, 0.15 M NMDA or phosphate
buffered saline were infused for a total of 8 weeks. Within
1-2 weeks of the onset of NMDA, but not phosphate buffered saline
infusions, the rats exhibited irritability, circling, biting
and excessive grooming resulting in loss of hair, and skin ulcerations
from autotomy localized to lumbar and sacral innervated dermatomes.
Co-infusion of NMDA with magnesium sulfate almost completely
prevented these findings. The behavioural changes were not associated
with abnormalities of sensory or motor conduction. Intrathecal
infusion of NMDA induces a chronic "central" experimental pain
disorder in rats, localized to the cord segment with the greatest
exposure to the infusion, without involvement of peripheral
sensory axons and sparing the axonal integrity of anterior horn
cells.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 24-28
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