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Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation

BACKGROUND: Social defect and chronic pain are 2 major health problems and recent data has demonstrated that they generally exist concurrently. However, a powerful evaluation model on the behavioral change is lacking. This study was designed to evaluate the behavioral curves using a statistically mo...

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Autores principales: Wang, Xian, Feng, Shan Wu, Wang, Fuzhou, Xu, Shiqin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220587/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25348794
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSMBR.892615
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author Wang, Xian
Feng, Shan Wu
Wang, Fuzhou
Xu, Shiqin
author_facet Wang, Xian
Feng, Shan Wu
Wang, Fuzhou
Xu, Shiqin
author_sort Wang, Xian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Social defect and chronic pain are 2 major health problems and recent data has demonstrated that they generally exist concurrently. However, a powerful evaluation model on the behavioral change is lacking. This study was designed to evaluate the behavioral curves using a statistically modeled trajectory analysis in neuropathic animals with or without social defect exposure. MATERIAL/METHODS: After approval by the institutional animal care committee, Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into different interventional groups with 15 animals each. Sprague-Dawley rats underwent spared nerve injury (SNI) to establish the neuropathic pain model, of which the mechanical withdrawal threshold was measured using von Frey filaments for a period of 105 days. Otherwise, a modified version of the resident (Long-Evans rats)-intruder paradigm was applied to produce a social defect animal model through the elevated plus maze (EPM). After raw data collection, we modeled them into a powerful statistical effects analysis to build up the behavioral change tendency in single SNI or in combined SNI and social defect animals. RESULTS: The random and fixed effects analyses of the pain behavior after SNI were successfully modeled and demonstrated a gradient recovery tendency during the 15-week post-injury observational period. Correspondingly, SNI rats exhibited increased social defected symptoms, as indicated by the increased anxiety-like behavior in the EPM test. In addition, continuous social defect stress for 5 days or 10 days, respectively, partially attenuated and exacerbated SNI-induced allodynia in both random and fixed effects models. Five days but not 10 days social defect ameliorated SNI-associated anxiety-like behavior. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that statistically powerful analysis of nerve injury-induced neuropathic pain is a highly sensitive model to determine the behavioral change tendency and distinguish them among behavior curves with or without social defect, and the combination of SNI with resident-intruder paradigm may be a suitable model for behavior evaluation of neuropathic pain with social defect.
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spelling pubmed-42205872014-11-05 Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation Wang, Xian Feng, Shan Wu Wang, Fuzhou Xu, Shiqin Med Sci Monit Basic Res Animal Studies BACKGROUND: Social defect and chronic pain are 2 major health problems and recent data has demonstrated that they generally exist concurrently. However, a powerful evaluation model on the behavioral change is lacking. This study was designed to evaluate the behavioral curves using a statistically modeled trajectory analysis in neuropathic animals with or without social defect exposure. MATERIAL/METHODS: After approval by the institutional animal care committee, Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into different interventional groups with 15 animals each. Sprague-Dawley rats underwent spared nerve injury (SNI) to establish the neuropathic pain model, of which the mechanical withdrawal threshold was measured using von Frey filaments for a period of 105 days. Otherwise, a modified version of the resident (Long-Evans rats)-intruder paradigm was applied to produce a social defect animal model through the elevated plus maze (EPM). After raw data collection, we modeled them into a powerful statistical effects analysis to build up the behavioral change tendency in single SNI or in combined SNI and social defect animals. RESULTS: The random and fixed effects analyses of the pain behavior after SNI were successfully modeled and demonstrated a gradient recovery tendency during the 15-week post-injury observational period. Correspondingly, SNI rats exhibited increased social defected symptoms, as indicated by the increased anxiety-like behavior in the EPM test. In addition, continuous social defect stress for 5 days or 10 days, respectively, partially attenuated and exacerbated SNI-induced allodynia in both random and fixed effects models. Five days but not 10 days social defect ameliorated SNI-associated anxiety-like behavior. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that statistically powerful analysis of nerve injury-induced neuropathic pain is a highly sensitive model to determine the behavioral change tendency and distinguish them among behavior curves with or without social defect, and the combination of SNI with resident-intruder paradigm may be a suitable model for behavior evaluation of neuropathic pain with social defect. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2014-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4220587/ /pubmed/25348794 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSMBR.892615 Text en © Med Sci Monit, 2014 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License
spellingShingle Animal Studies
Wang, Xian
Feng, Shan Wu
Wang, Fuzhou
Xu, Shiqin
Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation
title Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation
title_full Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation
title_fullStr Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation
title_short Modeled Behavior of Neuropathic Pain with Social Defect in Rats: A Preliminary Methodology Evaluation
title_sort modeled behavior of neuropathic pain with social defect in rats: a preliminary methodology evaluation
topic Animal Studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220587/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25348794
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSMBR.892615
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