Abstract

Capsaicin is a neurotoxin known for its ability to cause degeneration of small unmyelinated primary sensory neurons in both spinal and cranial nerves. Although lower motor neurons do not degenerate following capsaicin treatment, the extent to which capsaicin may damage neurons in the brain has not been thoroughly evaluated. This study examines the effects of systemic capsaicin (50-150 mg/kg) on the central nervous system of 10-day-old rats. Rat pups were injected with capsaicin or the injection vehicle and sacrificed 6 hours-10 days later. Brains, spinal cords, and retinas were stained with cupric silver to label degenerating neurons. As previously reported for capsaicin-treated rats, degenerating nerve terminals were present in areas receiving primary afferent input: the spinal cord dorsal horn, spinal trigeminal nucleus, nucleus of the solitary tract, and area postrema. However, degenerating terminals were also present in areas not known to receive primary sensory innervation: the inferior olivary nucleus, sphenoid nucleus, medial and olivary pretectal nuclei, interpeduncular nucleus, interfascicular nucleus, caudal linear, dorsal, median, and paramedian raphe nuclei, supramammillary area, lateral habenula, ventrolateral geniculate nucleus, ventral reuniens nucleus, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus, lateral hypothalamic and preoptic areas, suprachiasmatic nucleus, septohypothalamic nucleus, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, lateral septal nucleus, accumbens shell, olfactory bulb, and retina. Some areas where capsaicin caused degeneration in rat pups do not appear to be capsaicin-sensitive in adult rats. Results indicate that (1) capsaicin's neurotoxicity is not limited to primary sensory neurons and (2) developmental factors may alter the capsaicin sensitivity of some neuronal projections within the brain.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call