Abstract

Sensory nerves play an important role in mediating neurogenic inflammation and subsequent tissue healing. A decrease in sensory nerve function with increasing age has been reported to correlate with poor tissue healing. Sympathetic nerves are known to modulate sensory nerve function, and changes in this modulation could also have important implications with ageing. The aims of this study were to examine the effect of different frequency electrical stimulation (ES) on the microvascular responses obtained to sensory nerve activation in young, aged and capsaicin-pretreated rats and modulation of these responses by sympathetic efferents. Using laser Doppler flowmetry, vascular responses to antidromic ES of the sciatic nerve were monitored in the base of vacuum-induced blisters in the hind footpad. The non-selective alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist phentolamine (3 mg/kg, i.v.) was administered 20 min prior to ES. At high frequency ES (20V, 2ms, 15Hz for 1 min), the vascular response in old rats was significantly reduced (46 percent decrease, p < 0.05) compared to young control. At low frequency ES (20 V, 2 ms, 5 Hz for 1 min) however, older rats produced similar vascular responses to the young. Capsaicin-pretreated rats showed significantly reduced vascular responses to both high and low frequency ES, regardless of age. Pretreatment with phentolamine significantly increased the microvascular response in young rats at high (87 percent) and low (36 percent) frequency ES. In contrast, phentolamine significantly increased the ES-induced response in old rats at high frequency only (147 percent increase). The results suggest that the aged sensory nerve responds preferentially to low frequency ES and that sympathetic efferents exert an inhibitory modulatory effect on the vascular response evoked by sensory nerve stimulation. There are age-related changes in sympathetic modulation of sensory nerve-mediated responses which is dependent on stimulation frequency.

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