1. Involvement of transient receptor potential vanilloid 2 in intra‐oral incisional pain.
- Author
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Urata, K., Shinoda, M., Ikutame, D., Iinuma, T., and Iwata, K.
- Subjects
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ORAL mucosa , *ALLERGIES , *ALLODYNIA , *CARRIER proteins , *HYPERALGESIA , *MECHANORECEPTORS , *NEURONS , *POSTOPERATIVE pain , *MEMBRANE transport proteins , *PAIN threshold , *SURGERY - Abstract
Objective: To examine whether transient receptor potential vanilloid 2 (TRPV2) contributes to the changes in intra‐oral thermal and mechanical sensitivity following the incision of buccal mucosa. Materials and Methods: Buccal mucosal pain threshold was measured after the incision. Changes in the number of TRPV2‐immunoreactive (IR) trigeminal ganglion (TG) neurons which innervate the whisker pad skin and buccal mucosa, changes in the number of isolectin B4‐negative/isolectin B4‐positive TRPV2‐IR TG neurons which innervate the whisker pad skin and the buccal mucosa, and the effect of peripheral TRPV2 antagonism on the pain threshold of incisional whisker pad skin and buccal mucosa were examined after these injuries. Results: Buccal mucosal pain hypersensitivities were induced on day 3 following the incision. The total number of TRPV2‐IR TG neurons and the number of isolectin B4‐negative TRPV2‐IR TG neurons which innervate the whisker pad skin and buccal mucosa were increased. Buccal mucosal TRPV2 antagonism completely suppressed the heat and mechanical hypersensitivities, but not cold hypersensitivity. TRPV2 antagonist administration to the incisional whisker pad skin only partially suppressed pain hypersensitivities. Conclusion: The increased expression of TRPV2 in peptidergic TG neurons innervating the incisional buccal mucosa is predominantly involved in buccal mucosal heat hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia following buccal mucosal incision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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