Abstract

In experiments on the 7-day-old female and male Long-Evans rat pups, for the first time, there was studied effect of prenatal (immobilization) stress on dynamics of nociceptive behavioral response caused by an inflammatory focus. The nociceptive sensitivity was evaluated for 1 h by the number of 7-day-old organized at the spinal level in response to injection of formalin (10%, 10 microl) to the posterior leg sole. Control rat pups were not submitted to any prenatal stress; in these animals the response in the formalin test was found to be represented by one phase. It the prenatally stressed rat pups the studied patterns were organized into two phases characteristic of the definitive type of response. At the period between them (during interphase), the nociceptive behavior was absent. At the second, tonic phase the number of flexes+shakes in the prenatally stressed males was statistically significantly higher than in the prenatally stressed females, which indicates a sensitization of the neurons involved in the tonic pain chains in male individuals. Thus, the data obtained on prenatally stressed animals confirm the previous data about immaturity of the mechanisms mediating the second phase of response in the formalin test in the 7-day-old rat pups. An important fact is revealed which indicates that in the prenatally stressed rat pups of the same age the second phase of response is already obvious. Mechanisms underlying the behavioral response caused by the inflammatory focus in the formalin test in the number flexes + shakes old stressed rat pups are characterized by sexual dimorphism: the pain sensitivity in males at the second phase of response is statistically significantly higher than in females.

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