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    J Pain. 2009 Apr;10(4):436-45.

    Joint distraction magnitude is associated with different behavioral outcomes and substance P levels for cervical facet joint loading in the rat.

    Lee KE, Winkelstein BA.

    Department of Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6392, USA.

    The facet joint is a common source of pain in both the neck and low back, and can be injured by abnormal loading of the spinal joints. Whereas a host of nociceptive changes including neuronal activation, neuropeptide expression, and inflammatory mediator responses has been reported for rat models of joint pain, no such responses have been explicitly investigated or quantified for painful mechanical injury to the facet joint. Two magnitudes of joint loading were separately imposed in a rat model of cervical facet joint distraction: Painful and nonpainful distractions. Behavioral outcomes were defined by assessing mechanical hyperalgesia in the shoulders and forepaws. Substance P (SP) mRNA and protein levels were quantified in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and spinal cord at days 1 and 7 following distraction. Painful distraction produced mechanical hyperalgesia that was significantly greater (P < .010) than that for a nonpainful distraction. Painful distraction significantly increased spinal SP mRNA (P = .048) and SP protein expression in the DRG (P = .013) at day 7 compared to nonpainful distraction. However, spinal SP protein for painful distraction was significantly less (P = .024) than that for nonpainful distraction at day 1. Joint distractions producing different behavioral outcomes modulate SP mRNA and protein in the DRG and spinal cord, suggesting that SP responses may be involved with different temporal responses in painful joint loading. PERSPECTIVE: SP mRNA and protein in the DRG and spinal cord are quantified at 2 time points after cervical facet joint distractions that separately do or do not produce mechanical hyperalgesia. Studies describe a role for SP to contribute to pain produced by mechanical joint loading.

    PMID: 19327645 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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