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Maximum axonal following frequency separates classes of cutaneous unmyelinated nociceptors in the pig

Authors :
Otilia Obreja
Brian Turnquist
Matthias Ringkamp
Michael Hirth
Fiona Werland
Roman Rukwied
Barbara Namer
Ellen Jørum
Martin Schmelz
Source :
The Journal of physiologyReferences. 599(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Key points C-nociceptors are generally assumed to have a low maximum discharge frequency of 10 - 30 Hz. However, only mechano-insensitive "silent" C-nociceptors cannot follow electrical stimulation at 5 Hz (75 pulses) whereas polymodal C-nociceptors in the pig follow even 100 Hz without conduction failure. Sensitization by nerve growth factor increases the maximum following frequency of "silent" nociceptors in pig skin and might thereby contribute in particular to intense pain sensations in chronic inflammation. A distinct class of C-nociceptors with mechanical thresholds >150 mN resembles "silent" nociceptors at low stimulation frequencies in pig and human, but is capable of 100 Hz discharge and thus, is suited to encode painfulness of noxious mechanical stimuli. Abstract Using extracellular single-fibre recordings from the saphenous nerve in pig in vivo, we investigated peak following frequencies (5-100 Hz) in different classes of C-nociceptors and their modulation by nerve growth factor. Classes were defined by sensory (mechano-sensitivity) and axonal characteristics (activity dependent slowing of conduction, ADS). Mechano-insensitive C-nociceptors (CMi) showed the highest ADS (34 % ± 8 %), followed only 66±27 % of 75 pulses at 5 Hz and increasingly blocked conduction at higher frequencies. Three weeks following intradermal injections of nerve growth factor, peak following frequency increased specifically in the sensitized mechano-insensitive nociceptors (20 ±16 % to 38±23 % response rate after 72 pulses at 100 Hz). In contrast, untreated polymodal nociceptors with moderate ADS (15.2±10.2 %) followed stimulation frequencies of 100 Hz without conduction failure (98.5±6 %). A distinct class of C-nociceptors was exclusively sensitive to strong forces above 150 mN. This class had a high ADS (27.2 % ±7.6 %), but displayed almost no propagation failure even at 100 Hz stimulation (84.7±17 %). Also among human mechanosensitive nociceptors (n = 153) those with thresholds above 150 mN (n = 5) showed ADS typical for silent nociceptors. C-fibres with particularly high mechanical thresholds and high following frequency form a distinct nociceptor class ideally suited to encode noxious mechanical stimulation under normal condition when regular silent nociceptors are inactive. Sensitization by nerve growth factor increases maximum discharge frequency of silent nociceptors, thereby increasing the frequency range beyond their physiological limit which possibly contributes to excruciating pain under inflammatory conditions. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
14697793 and 00223751
Volume :
599
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of physiologyReferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....da04580345249e61977a5aff1f4acf69