Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate sex-related differences in nociception elicited by s.c. injection of different concentrations (1–5%) of formalin. S.c. formalin-induced biphasic (early and late phases) persistent nociception was assessed by extracellularly recording the spontaneous activities of single spinal dorsal horn wide-dynamic range neurons in anesthetized male and female rats. The nociceptive responses of the dorsal horn wide-dynamic range neurons following s.c. injection of 5%, but not 1% and 2.5%, formalin in female rats were significantly stronger than the responses obtained in male rats. However, these concentration-dependent differences with respect to different sexes existed only in the late, but not the early, phase of formalin-induced nociception in intact, not spinal rats. The 5% formalin-induced late phase nociception in male rats was significantly depressed by 15 min of repeated conditioning electrical stimulation at a frequency of 5Hz as well as 50Hz during and after the period of conditioning electrical stimulation (intensity: 1mA; pulse duration: 1 ms). In contrast, the inhibitory effect of 50Hz conditioning electrical stimulation on the 5% formalin-elicited late phase response in female rats was markedly greater in magnitude and longer in duration than that of 5Hz conditioning electrical stimulation. No significant depressive effects of 5Hz conditioning electrical stimulation on formalin-induced nociception were found in female rats, indicating that the distinct effects of conditioning electrical stimulation at different frequencies are different in animals of opposite sexes.In conclusion, s.c. administration of different concentrations of formalin shows a distinct sex-related difference in its late tonic nociception of spinal nociceptive sensory neurons. Sex differences in formalin-induced tonic nociception are stimulus intensity dependent and related to the modulation from the supraspinal regions. S.c. formalin-induced late phase nociception in female rats is only sensitive to depression at a frequency of 50Hz, but not 5Hz, of conditioning electrical stimulation. This suggests that the involvement of the central mechanisms in the antinociceptive effects of conditioning electrical stimulation may be different at various frequencies of stimulation.

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