Pain and Itch Processing in Aged Mice - 12/12/23
Abstract |
Most reports agree that aging negatively impacts pain processing and that the prevalence of chronic pain increases significantly with age. To improve current therapies, it is critical that aged animals be included in preclinical studies. Here we compared sensitivities to pain and itch-provoking stimuli in naïve and injured young and aged mice. Surprisingly, we found that in the absence of injury, aged male and female mice are significantly less responsive to mechanical stimuli and, in females, also to noxious thermal (heat) stimuli. In both older male and female mice, compared to younger (6-month-old mice), we also recorded reduced pruritogen-evoked scratching. On the other hand, after nerve injury, aged mice nevertheless developed significant mechanical hypersensitivity. Interestingly, however, and in contrast to young mice, aged mice developed both ipsilateral and contralateral postinjury mechanical allodynia. In a parallel immunohistochemical analysis of microglial and astrocyte markers, we found that the ipsilateral to the contralateral ratio of nerve injury-induced expression decreased with age. That observation is consistent with our finding of contralateral hypersensitivity after nerve injury in the aged but not the young mice. We conclude that aging has opposite effects on baseline versus postinjury pain and itch processing.
Perspective |
Aged male and female mice (22–24 months) are less sensitive to mechanical, thermal (heat), and itch-provoking stimuli than are younger mice (6 months).
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | Aged male and female mice are hyposensitive to mechanical and thermal stimuli than younger mice. |
• | Aged mice develop ipsilateral and contralateral mechanical allodynia post nerve injury. |
• | Young mice develop only ipsilateral mechanical hypersensitivity post nerve injury. |
• | Aged male and female mice are less sensitive to itch-provoking stimuli than younger mice. |
Key Words : Pain, itch, aging, mouse, sexual dimorphism
Plan
| Address reprint requests to Joao Braz, 1550 4th Street, Box 2722, San Francisco, CA 94158. E-mail: joao.braz2@ucsf.edu |
Vol 25 - N° 1
P. 53-63 - janvier 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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