Abstract

Nausea and vomiting are common symptoms in patients with many diseases, including cancer and its treatments. Although the neurological basis of vomiting is reasonably well known, an understanding of the physiology of nausea is lacking. The primary barrier to mechanistic research on the nausea system is the lack of an animal model. Indeed investigating the effects of anti-nausea drugs in pre-clinical models is difficult because the primary readout is often emesis. It is known that animals show a behavioral profile of sickness, associated with reduced feeding and movement, and possibly these general measures are signs of nausea. Studies attempting to relate the occurrence of additional behaviors to emesis have produced mixed results. Here we applied a statistical method, temporal pattern (t-pattern) analysis, to determine patterns of behavior associated with emesis. Musk shrews were injected with the chemotherapy agent cisplatin (a gold standard in emesis research) to induce acute (<24 h) and delayed (>24 h) emesis. Emesis and other behaviors were coded and tracked from video files. T-pattern analysis revealed hundreds of non-random patterns of behavior associated with emesis, including sniffing, changes in body contraction, and locomotion. There was little evidence that locomotion was inhibited by the occurrence of emesis. Eating, drinking, and other larger body movements including rearing, grooming, and body rotation, were significantly less common in emesis-related behavioral patterns in real versus randomized data. These results lend preliminary evidence for the expression of emesis-related behavioral patterns, including reduced ingestive behavior, grooming, and exploratory behaviors. In summary, this statistical approach to behavioral analysis in a pre-clinical emesis research model could be used to assess the more global effects and limitations of drugs used to control nausea and its potential correlates, including reduced feeding and activity levels.

Highlights

  • Cytotoxic chemotherapy agents used in cancer treatment have multiple adverse side effects, including nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and fatigue, which impose a severe physical and emotional burden on cancer patients (Hainsworth and Hesketh, 1992; Hofman et al, 2007; Hesketh, 2008; Kaley and Deangelis, 2009)

  • Temporal pattern analysis revealed a large number of non-random patterns of behavior associated with emesis in musk shrews, including sniffing, changes in body contraction, and locomotion

  • There was little evidence that locomotion was inhibited in the 72-h experiment by the occurrence of emesis

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Summary

Introduction

Cytotoxic chemotherapy agents used in cancer treatment (e.g., cisplatin) have multiple adverse side effects, including nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and fatigue, which impose a severe physical and emotional burden on cancer patients (Hainsworth and Hesketh, 1992; Hofman et al, 2007; Hesketh, 2008; Kaley and Deangelis, 2009). Vomiting is an obvious indication of sickness but there might be behavioral patterns leading up to and/or following an emetic episode In this way the occurrence of vomiting could be used as an unequivocal anchor for evaluating the behavioral changes that occur with sickness, malaise, and potentially nausea. There has been little effort focused on a quantitative analysis of the patterns of behavior related to emesis

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