The formalin model is widely used for evaluating the effects of analgesic compounds in laboratory animals. Injection of formalin into the hind paw induces a biphasic pain response; the first phase is thought to result from direct activation of primary afferent sensory neurons, whereas the second phase has been proposed to reflect the combined effects of afferent input and central sensitization in the dorsal horn. Here we show that formalin excites sensory neurons by directly activating TRPA1, a cation channel that plays an important role in inflammatory pain. Formalin induced robust calcium influx in cells expressing cloned or native TRPA1 channels, and these responses were attenuated by a previously undescribed TRPA1-selective antagonist. Moreover, sensory neurons from TRPA1-deficient mice lacked formalin sensitivity. At the behavioral level, pharmacologic blockade or genetic ablation of TRPA1 produced marked attenuation of the characteristic flinching, licking, and lifting responses resulting from intraplantar injection of formalin. Our results show that TRPA1 is the principal site of formalin's pain-producing action in vivo, and that activation of this excitatory channel underlies the physiological and behavioral responses associated with this model of pain hypersensitivity.analgesia ͉ inflammation ͉ trp channel ͉ formaldehyde T he formalin model was developed Ͼ30 years ago to assess pain and evaluate analgesic drugs in laboratory animals (1). In this test, a dilute (0.5-5%) formalin solution (in which formaldehyde is the active ingredient) is injected into the paw of a rodent, and pain-related behaviors are assessed over two temporally distinct phases, including an initial robust phase in which paw lifting, licking, and f linching are scored during the first 10 min, followed by a transient decline in these behaviors and a subsequent second phase of behavior lasting 30 -60 min (2, 3).Compounds that typically affect the first phase (Phase I) include local anesthetics, such as lidocaine (4). The second phase (Phase II) is proposed to result from activity-dependent sensitization of CNS neurons within the dorsal horn (3, 5, 6). Many analgesics, including intrathecal nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (7), NMDA antagonists (8, 9), morphine (1, 10), and gabapentin (11, 12), inhibit only Phase II responses, but not Phase I.The formalin test has several advantages over other models, in that spontaneous pain-related responses can be observed in a freely moving unrestrained animal. Once injected, no additional stimulus is required to evoke nocifensive behaviors, and behaviors can be scored over a prolonged period such that the precise onset and duration of analgesics can be assessed (1). However, despite the utility and widespread use of the formalin model in pain research, the mechanism by which formalin triggers C-fiber activation remains unknown (13) and is often attributed to tissue injury (1,3,9).In this study, we show that formalin activates primary afferent sensory neurons through a specific and direct action o...
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