4.6 Article

Postinjury stimulation triggers a transition to nociplastic pain in mice

Journal

PAIN
Volume 163, Issue 3, Pages 461-473

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002366

Keywords

Nociplastic pain; Chronification; Mechanical hypersensitivity; Microglia; Sexually dimorphic

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 NS112344, R01 DA050530, F99 NS120636]
  2. Jeane B. Kempner Predoctoral Fellowship

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Acute injury-induced pain can transition to chronic nociplastic pain, predominantly affecting women. Different intensities and timings of postinjury stimulation can lead to chronicization, with sexually dimorphic mechanisms maintaining the hypersensitivity state.
Acute injury-induced pain can transition to chronic nociplastic pain, which predominantly affects women. To facilitate studies on the underlying mechanisms of nociplastic pain, we developed a mouse model in which postinjury thermal stimulation (intermittent 40 degrees C water immersion for 10 minutes at 2 hours postcapsaicin) prolongs capsaicin (ie, experimental injury)-induced transient mechanical hypersensitivity outside of the injury area. Although capsaicin injection alone induced mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity that resolved in similar to 7 days (slower recovery in females), the postinjury stimulation prolonged capsaicin-induced mechanical, but not thermal, hypersensitivity up to 3 weeks in both sexes. When postinjury stimulation was given at a lower intensity (30 degrees C) or at later time points (40 degrees C at 1-3 days postcapsaicin), chronification of mechanical hypersensitivity occurred only in females. Similar chronification could be induced by a different postinjury stimulation modality (vibration of paw) or with a different injury model (plantar incision). Notably, the 40 degrees C postinjury stimulation did not prolong capsaicin-induced inflammation in the hind paw, indicating that the prolonged mechanical hypersensitivity in these mice arises without clear evidence of ongoing injury, reflecting nociplastic pain. Although morphine and gabapentin effectively alleviated this persistent mechanical hypersensitivity in both sexes, sexually dimorphic mechanisms mediated the hypersensitivity. Specifically, ongoing afferent activity at the previously capsaicin-injected area was critical in females, whereas activated spinal microglia were crucial in males. These results demonstrate that postinjury stimulation of the injured area can trigger the transition from transient pain to nociplastic pain more readily in females, and sex-dependent mechanisms maintain the nociplastic pain state.

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