Abstract

A C-fiber nociceptive reflex evoked by electrical stimulation within the territory of the sural nerve, was recorded from the ipsilateral biceps femoris muscle in urethane anesthetized rats. Intravenously administered clomipramine and desipramine produced a dose-dependent depression of the C-fiber reflex. High doses of intrathecal desipramine also inhibited the C-fiber reflex, while similar intrathecal doses of clomipramine produced only a modest inhibition of the response. Intracerebroventricular administration of clomipramine decreased dose-dependently the C-fiber reflex whereas intracerebroventricular desipramine increased this reflex. These findings suggest that tricyclic antidepressants with noradrenergic selectivity, as desipramine, inhibit the spinal processing of C inputs by acting directly at the spinal cord level, while those with serotonergic spectra, as clomipramine, depress the C-fiber-evoked spinal reflex by acting at a supraspinal modulatory site.

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