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Peripheral nerve injury alters excitatory synaptic transmission in lamina II of the rat dorsal horn
Author(s) -
Kohno Tatsuro,
Moore Kimberly A.,
Baba Hiroshi,
Woolf Clifford J.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-7793.2003.00131.x
Subject(s) - pacemaker potential , excitatory postsynaptic potential , anatomy , peristalsis , neuroscience , electrophysiology , chemistry , neurotransmission , biology , inhibitory postsynaptic potential , medicine , receptor
Using the blind whole cell patch‐clamp recording technique, we investigated peripheral nerve injury‐induced changes in excitatory synaptic transmission to neurones in lamina II of the dorsal horn. Partial (i.e. chronic constriction injury (CCI) and spared nerve injury (SNI)) and complete (i.e. sciatic nerve transection (SNT)) peripheral nerve injury altered the mean threshold intensity for eliciting A fibre‐mediated EPSCs in lamina II neurones. Following SNT and CCI, EPSC threshold was significantly decreased, but following SNI, EPSC threshold was increased (naive: 32 ± 2 μA, SNT: 22 ± 2 μA, CCI: 23 ± 2 μA, SNI: 49 ± 4 μA; P < 0.01, Student's unpaired t test). Despite this disparity between models, dorsal root compound action potential recordings revealed no significant difference in the conduction velocity or activation threshold of Aβ and Aδ fibres in naive, SNT, CCI and SNI rats. In addition to the changes in EPSC threshold, we also observed a shift in the distribution of EPSCs. In spinal cord slices from naive rats, polysynaptic Aβ fibre‐evoked EPSCs were observed in 24 % of lamina II neurones, monosynaptic Aδ fibre EPSCs were observed in 34 % and polysynaptic Aδ fibre EPSCs were observed in 7 %. Following SNT and CCI, the percentage of neurones with polysynaptic Aβ fibre EPSCs increased to ⩾ 65 % of the sampled population, while the percentage of neurones with monosynaptic Aδ fibre EPSCs decreased to < 10 %. The percentage of neurones with polysynaptic Aδ fibre EPSCs was unchanged. In contrast, following SNI, Aβ fibre EPSCs decreased in incidence while the percentage of neurones with polysynaptic Aδ fibre EPSCs increased to 44 %. Similar to the other injury models, however, monosynaptic Aδ fibre EPSCs decreased in frequency following SNI. Thus, excitatory synaptic transmission is subject to divergent plasticity in different peripheral nerve injury models, reflecting the complexity of responses to different forms of deafferentation.