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Lesions of the caudal ventrolateral medulla block the hypertension‐induced inhibition of noxious‐evoked c‐fos expression in the rat spinal cord
Author(s) -
Tavares I.,
Almeida A.,
AlbinoTeixeira A.,
Lima D.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
european journal of pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.305
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1532-2149
pISSN - 1090-3801
DOI - 10.1016/s1090-3801(97)90073-2
Subject(s) - noxious stimulus , spinal cord , stimulation , c fos , nociception , endocrinology , medulla oblongata , medicine , blood pressure , medulla , rostral ventrolateral medulla , anesthesia , heart rate , chemistry , central nervous system , gene expression , receptor , psychiatry , biochemistry , gene
The effect of lesioning the lateral portion of the caudal ventrolateral medullary reticular formation (VLMIat) on the noxious‐evoked expression of the c‐fos proto‐oncogene in spinal neurons, was studied in short‐term hypertensive rats. Occlusion of the renal artery for 96 h in unlesioned animals induced a 52% increase in blood pressure (BP) and a 66% decrease in the number of Fos‐immunoreactive (Fos‐IR) spinal cells following noxious cutaneous stimulation, as compared to values in normotensive controls. Lesioning the VLMIat in hypertensive rats by unilateral quinolinic acid (QA) injection (0.3 μl of a 180 nmol/μl solution) 24 h before noxious stimulation, prevented the Fos‐IR cell decrease. In normotensive rats, lesioning the VLMIat produced no changes in c‐fos expression. To investigate the role played by the VLMIat in cardiovascular control, BP and heart rate (HR) were measured during local injections of QA or glutamate (0.5 μl of a 100 nmol/μl solution) to normotensive animals. Injections of QA produced an immediate rise in BP and HR which reached maximal values (18 and 14% increase, respectively) 5 min after the administration onset, then returning gradually to baseline levels. Glutamate injections resulted in an immediate decrease of the same values, which reached 29 and 39%, respectively, 4 min after the beginning of injection, after which they decreased to baseline levels. These results suggest that VLMIat neurons inhibit nociceptive spinal neurons in response to rises in blood pressure, while exerting negative control of cardiovascular parameters. It is suggested that the VLMIat is involved in the genesis of hypoalgesia during hypertension.