2005
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0506226102
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Sensory suppression during feeding

Abstract: Feeding is essential for survival, whereas withdrawal and escape reactions are fundamentally protective. These critical behaviors can compete for an animal's resources when an acutely painful stimulus affects the animal during feeding. One solution to the feeding-withdrawal conflict is to optimize feeding by suppressing pain. We examined whether rats continue to feed when challenged with a painful stimulus. During feeding, motor withdrawal responses to noxious paw heat either did not occur or were greatly dela… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…The present finding that 7-Cl-KYN in the VL-PAG blocked glycine-or D-serine-induced antinociception and the related changes in the RVM cell activity suggests that the effects of glycine or D-serine were related to the enhancement of NMDAR-mediated neurotransmission. Since the ON cells may facilitate nociception (Fields et al 1991), a delayed onset of the ON-cell burst as well as the shortened interval between the onset of the ON-cell burst and tail withdrawal, with either glycine or D-serine, might be expected to be critical events in the occurrence of analgesia (Foo and Mason 2005;Heinricher et al 1989;Jinks et al 2004). Indeed, pain transmission and perception are constantly changing: increasing during periods of ON-cell activity and decreasing when OFF cells are active FIG. 7.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The present finding that 7-Cl-KYN in the VL-PAG blocked glycine-or D-serine-induced antinociception and the related changes in the RVM cell activity suggests that the effects of glycine or D-serine were related to the enhancement of NMDAR-mediated neurotransmission. Since the ON cells may facilitate nociception (Fields et al 1991), a delayed onset of the ON-cell burst as well as the shortened interval between the onset of the ON-cell burst and tail withdrawal, with either glycine or D-serine, might be expected to be critical events in the occurrence of analgesia (Foo and Mason 2005;Heinricher et al 1989;Jinks et al 2004). Indeed, pain transmission and perception are constantly changing: increasing during periods of ON-cell activity and decreasing when OFF cells are active FIG. 7.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the case of urge to breathe in a submerged diving animal). In the case of pain, suppression of normal pain reactions is sometimes required to allow the animal to pursue more important tasks; this has been quantified in animal behaviour experiments [29,30].…”
Section: Psychophysicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nutrition is critical for survival, yet many animals place themselves at risk in order to feed. Animals must obtain nutrients while at the same time protecting their well-being; however, feeding seems to trump escape behavior, because it is more essential for survival, and so, more immediately necessary, as opposed to merely protective [ 36 ] . Thus, the body suppresses pain in order to optimize feeding in potentially dangerous situations [ 36,37 ] .…”
Section: Evolutionary Signalingmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Animals must obtain nutrients while at the same time protecting their well-being; however, feeding seems to trump escape behavior, because it is more essential for survival, and so, more immediately necessary, as opposed to merely protective [ 36 ] . Thus, the body suppresses pain in order to optimize feeding in potentially dangerous situations [ 36,37 ] . For example, while feeding, rats' withdrawal responses from noxious heat stimuli on the paw were either completely suppressed or greatly delayed [ 36 ] .…”
Section: Evolutionary Signalingmentioning
confidence: 97%
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