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Preemptive Analgesia with Acupuncture Monitored by c-Fos Expression in Rats
Author(s) -
André Teves Aquino Gonçalves de Freitas,
Lino Lemônica,
Júlio De Faveri,
Sérgio Pereira,
Maria D. Bedoya Henao
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of acupuncture and meridian studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.374
H-Index - 32
eISSN - 2093-8152
pISSN - 2005-2901
DOI - 10.1016/j.jams.2015.08.002
Subject(s) - c fos , acupuncture , medicine , electroacupuncture , anesthesia , acupuncture analgesia , spinal cord , immunohistochemistry , pathology , gene expression , psychiatry , biochemistry , chemistry , alternative medicine , gene
Pain behavior and awareness are characterized by heightened alertness and anxiety, which begin to disappear as soon as the curative process starts. The present study aimed to quantify c-fos expression in rat spinal cords and brains after a surgical stimulus and with preoperative or postoperative acupuncture. Animals were randomly divided into preoperative and postoperative groups and were then further divided into control, manual acupuncture (MA), or electroacupuncture (EA) groups. Expression of c-fos was quantified using immunohistochemistry. The collected data were analyzed using the t test at a 5% probability level. Presurgery and postsurgery spinal cord c-fos expressions were similar in all of the treatment groups. In the control rats, c-fos expression was higher before surgery than after surgery, contradicting the expected outcome of acupuncture and preemptive analgesia. After treatment, the expression of c-fos in the brains of the rats in the MA and the EA groups was reduced compared with that of the rats in the control group. These findings suggest that acupuncture used as preemptive analgesia in rats is a useful model for studying its application in human treatment.

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