Abstract

An attempt has been made to determine whether cats rendered arthritic by the injection of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals (rod-shaped 40–130 μm length) into one knee joint capsule can be used as an animal model of tonic (chronic) pain. A limp and a decrease in body weight supported by the injected hind leg's paw occurred approximately l h after the MSU (20 mg) injection, reached a maximum at 2–3 h, and lasted for more than 6 h before a gradual return to pre-injection levels. They were diminished by systemic administration and local (the dorsal part of the nucleus raphe dorsalis) application of morphine, this effect being blocked by naloxone. This suggests that the limping and the paw pressure decrease are the reflexion of pain. It is suggested that the animal model of the MSU-induced arthritis is useful for the study of tonic pain.

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