Abstract
Stressful stimuli can activate the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal-axis and the endogenous opioid system. In addition, corticosterone and opioid release might cause analgesia. This rat study used adrenalectomy for corticosterone withdrawal and naloxone administration for opioid antagonism in order to study pain behavior and hypophyseal hormone release in the plasma after a formalin test. Twelve days before the formalin testing, male Sprague Dawley rats underwent adrenalectomy or sham-adrenalectomy, and non-operated rats were used as reference. The number of flinches and the duration of licking or biting behavior were measured during the early and late phase. In reference and sham-operated rats, injection of formalin 5% resulted in a marked pain behavior in the early and late phase with significant increases in ACTH and corticosterone plasma levels. In adrenalectomized rats, pain behavior was decreased during both phases. Naloxone, administered before the late phase, did not alter pain behavior in sham or reference rats, whereas in adrenalectomized rats pain reactivity returned to those levels observed in reference rats. Beta-endorphin plasma levels above the detection limit were more frequently found in adrenalectomized rats. Thyrotropin and prolactin levels were not different between studied groups. We speculate that the observed reduced pain behavior in adrenalectomized rats after formalin, is the result of an increased production of pro-opiomelanocortin, the pro-drug of both adrenocorticotrophic hormone and beta-endorphin.
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