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Use of the Operant Orofacial Pain Assessment Device (OPAD) to Measure Changes in Nociceptive Behavior
Author(s) -
Ethan M. Anderson,
Richard H. Mills,
Todd A. Nolan,
Alan C. Jenkins,
Golam Mustafa,
Chris Lloyd,
Robert M. Caudle,
John K. Neubert
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of visualized experiments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 1940-087X
DOI - 10.3791/50336
Subject(s) - nociception , stimulus (psychology) , operant conditioning , neuroscience , licking , lozenge , session (web analytics) , orofacial pain , psychology , audiology , medicine , reinforcement , computer science , physical therapy , cognitive psychology , social psychology , receptor , world wide web , pharmacology , archaeology , history
We present an operant system for the detection of pain in awake, conscious rodents. The Orofacial Pain Assessment Device (OPAD) assesses pain behaviors in a more clinically relevant way by not relying on reflex-based measures of nociception. Food fasted, hairless (or shaved) rodents are placed into a Plexiglas chamber which has two Peltier-based thermodes that can be programmed to any temperature between 7 °C and 60 °C. The rodent is trained to make contact with these in order to access a reward bottle. During a session, a number of behavioral pain outcomes are automatically recorded and saved. These measures include the number of reward bottle activations (licks) and facial contact stimuli (face contacts), but custom measures like the lick/face ratio (total number of licks per session/total number of contacts) can also be created. The stimulus temperature can be set to a single temperature or multiple temperatures within a session. The OPAD is a high-throughput, easy to use operant assay which will lead to better translation of pain research in the future as it includes cortical input instead of relying on spinal reflex-based nociceptive assays.

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