4.4 Article

Inflammatory pain in the rabbit: A new, efficient method for measuring mechanical hyperalgesia in the hind paw

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS
Volume 168, Issue 1, Pages 76-87

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jneumeth.2007.09.028

Keywords

opioid; morphine; NSAID; indomethacin; bradykinin B-1; B-2; Electrovonfrey (R); carrageenan; [des-Arg(10),Leu9]-kallidin; HOE 140

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The discovery of novel analgesic Compounds that target some receptors can be challenging due to species differences in ligand pharmacology. If a putative analgesic compound has markedly lower affinity for rodent versus other mammalian orthologs of a receptor, the evaluation of antinociceptive efficacy in non-rodent species becomes necessary. Here, we describe a new, efficient method for measuring inflammation-associated nociception in conscious rabbits. An electronic von Frey device is used, consisting of a rigid plastic tip connected to a force transducer in a hand-held probe. The plastic tip is applied to the plantar surface of a hind paw with increasing force until a withdrawal response is observed. The maximum force (g) tolerated by the rabbit (i.e., withdrawal threshold) is recorded. In young, conscious rabbits (500-700 g), baseline hind paw withdrawal thresholds typically fell within the 60-80 g range. Three hours after injection of the inflammatory agent carrageenan (3%, 200 mu L, intra-plantar), withdrawal thresholds dropped by similar to 30-40 a, indicating the presence of punctate mechanical hyperalgesia. The development of hyperalgesia was dose dependently prevented by the NSAID indomethacin (ED50 = 2.56 mg/kg, p.o.) or the bradykinin B-2 receptor peptide antagonist HOE 140 (intra-paw administration). An established hyperalgesia was dose dependently reversed by morphine sulfate (ED50 = 0.096 mg/kg, s.c.) or the bradykinin B-1 receptor peptide antagonist [des-Arg(10),Leu(9)]-kallidin (ED50 = 0.45 mg/kg, s.c.). Rabbits treated with the novel B I receptor small molecule antagonist compound A also showed dose-dependent reversal of hyperalgesia (ED50 = 20.19 mg/kg, s.c.) and analysis of plasma samples taken from these rabbits showed that, unlike other rabbit pain models, the current method permits the evaluation of pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) relationships (compound A plasma EC50 = 402.6 nM). We conclude that the Electrovonfrey (R) method can be used in rabbits with inflammatory pain to generate reliable dose- and plasma concentration-effect curves for different classes of analgesics. (c) 2007 Published by Elsevier B.V..

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