Abstract

Recent electrophysiological experiments have shown that brain norepinephrine (NE) neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC) are activated by cutaneous thermal stimuli of both non-noxious and noxious character. In the present study the LC neuronal response to thermal stimuli was used to evaluate cutaneous thermal sensitivity in capsaicin-treated rats, a treatment that is described to cause impaired thermoregulation. Capsaicin treatment, of neonates as well as of adult rats, caused a reduced responsiveness of brain LC neurons to thermal stimuli. The results suggest that a reduction in peripheral thermal afferent transmission may be one mechanism underlying the capsaicin-induced thermoregulatory dysfunction.

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