Abstract

In an attempt to elucidate the role of β-endorphin in the modulation of ‘basal’ nociceptive threshold and in the mediation of the antinociception (analgesia) evoked by stress, a series of lesions of the arcuate nucleus, the origin of the central system of β-endorphinergic neurones, were performed. These lesions produced an ∼80% depression in the level of β-endorphin immunoreactivity in both the hypothalamus and periventricular β-endorphinergic fibre-containing tissue. A 50% decrease in the neurointermediate lobe content of immunoreactivity, but no change in the levels of this in the anterior lobe was also observed. Arcuate lesioned rats were significantly hyperalgesic in comparison to sham animals on day 4 post-operation, but on days 10 and 12, the basal nociceptive threshold of lesioned and sham groups did not differ significantly. On day 12 post-surgery upon exposure to 5 min foot-shock stress, lesioned rats developed a significantly smaller increase in tail-flick latency than did sham animals. These data are evidential of the importance of the arcuate nucleus in the determination of basal nociceptive threshold and in the generation of the analgesia which accompanies stress and are, further, suggestive of a role of central β-endorphin in the mediation of these processes.

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