Abstract

We investigated the effect of neonatal capsaicin treatment on formalin-evoked pain behavior and spinal levels of nociceptive neuromodulators using in vivo intrathecal microdialysis in conscious adult rats and age-matched controls. Capsaicin-treated rats displayed thermal hypoalgesia and a significant decrease in tissue content of calcitonin gene-related peptide. Paw swelling, flinching and release of spinal prostaglandin E2 induced by injection of formalin into the hindpaw were also reduced in capsaicin-treated rats compared with controls, whereas glutamate, aspartate and taurine release was unaffected. These data suggest that formalin-induced inflammation, pain behavior and spinal prostaglandin E2 release are mediated by mechanisms sensitive to neonatal capsaicin while the formalin-evoked release of amino acids in the spinal cord is not.

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