We examined the relation between ectopic afferent firing and tactile allodynia in the Chung model of neuropathic pain. Transection of the L5 spinal nerve in rats triggered a sharp, four- to six-fold increase in the spontaneous ectopic discharge recorded in vivo in sensory axons in the ipsilateral L5 dorsal root (DR). The increase, which was not yet apparent 16 h postoperatively, was complete by 24 h. This indicates rapid modification of the electrical properties of the neurons. Only A-neurons, primarily rapidly conducting A-neurons, contributed to the discharge. No spontaneously active C-neurons were encountered. Tactile allodynia in hindlimb skin emerged during precisely the same time window after spinal nerve section as the ectopia, suggesting that ectopic activity in injured myelinated afferents can trigger central sensitization, the mechanism believed to be responsible for tactile allodynia in the Chung model. Most of the spike activity originated in the somata of axotomized DRG neurons; the spinal nerve end neuroma accounted for only a quarter of the overall ectopic barrage. Intracellular recordings from afferent neuron somata in excised DRGs in vitro revealed changes in excitability that closely paralleled those seen in the DR axon recordings in vivo. Corresponding changes in biophysical characteristics of the axotomized neurons were catalogued. Axotomy carried out at a distance from the DRG, in the mid-portion of the sciatic nerve, also triggered increased afferent excitability. However, this increase occurred at a later time following axotomy, and the relative contribution of DRG neuronal somata, as opposed to neuroma endings, was smaller. Axotomy triggers a wide variety of changes in the neurochemistry and physiology of primary afferent neurons. Investigators studying DRG neurons in culture need to be alert to the rapidity with which axotomy, an inevitable consequence of DRG excision and dissociation, alters key properties of these neurons. Our identification of a specific population of neurons whose firing properties change suddenly and synchronously following axotomy, and whose activity is associated with tactile allodynia, provides a powerful vehicle for defining the specific cascade of cellular and molecular events that underlie neuropathic pain.
Cutting spinal nerves just distal to the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) triggers, with rapid onset, massive spontaneous ectopic discharge in axotomized afferent A-neurons, and at the same time induces tactile allodynia in the partially denervated hindlimb. We show that secondary transection of the dorsal root (rhizotomy) of the axotomized DRG, or suppression of the ectopia with topically applied local anesthetics, eliminates or attenuates the allodynia. Dorsal rhizotomy alone does not trigger allodynia. These observations support the hypothesis that ectopic firing in DRG A-neurons induces central sensitization which leads to tactile allodynia. The question of how activity in afferent A-neurons, which are not normally nociceptive, might induce allodynia is discussed in light of the current literature.
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