4.4 Article

Enhancement of Ectopic Discharge in Regenerating A- and C-Fibers by Inflammatory Mediators

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 6, Pages 2762-2774

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.91091.2008

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Ministry of Education and Research
  2. German Research Foundation
  3. Pfizer

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Grossmann L, Gorodetskaya N, Baron R, Janig W. Enhancement of ectopic discharge in regenerating A-and C-fibers by inflammatory mediators. J Neurophysiol 101: 2762-2774, 2009. First published March 11, 2009; doi: 10.1152/jn.91091.2008. Afferent A-and C-fibers regenerating into a nerve following peripheral nerve injury are exposed to inflammatory mediators released by Schwann cells, resident and invading macrophages, and other inflammatory cells. Here we tested the hypothesis that ongoing and evoked activity in these afferent fibers are enhanced by a mixture of inflammatory mediators [inflammatory soup (IS)] applied to the injured nerve. Using in vivo electrophysiology, regenerating afferent nerve fibers were studied 7-14 days after sural nerve crush lesion. The ectopic activity was studied before and <= 1.5 h after topical application of IS to the nerve in 73 C-fibers and 22 A-fibers that were either ectopically active before application of IS (61 C-fibers, 17 A-fibers) or recruited by IS (12 C-fibers, 5 A-fibers). More than one half of the C-fibers were activated by IS for <= 90 min after its removal. The majority of mechano- (23/38) and heat-sensitive (29/35) C-fibers as well as mechano-sensitive A-fibers (12/17) decreased their activation thresholds and/or increased the response magnitude to mechanical and/or heat stimulation of the nerve. Noxious cold sensitivity, but not nonnoxious cold sensitivity, was weakly influenced by IS. Some initially nonresponsive C-and A-fibers developed new ectopic properties, i.e., were recruited, and exhibited ongoing activity and/or could be activated by physiological stimuli after application of IS. The results suggest that inflammatory mediators may be critical to enhance ectopic excitability of regenerating afferent nerve fibers. These peripheral mechanisms may be important triggering and maintaining neuropathic pain.

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