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Published November 2010 | public
Journal Article

Pain behavior in the formalin test persists after ablation of the great majority of C-fiber nociceptors

Abstract

Although the formalin test is a widely used model of persistent pain, the primary afferent fiber types that underlie the cellular and behavioral responses to formalin injection are largely unknown. Here we used a combined genetic and pharmacological approach to investigate the effect of ablating subsets of primary afferent nociceptors on formalin-induced nocifensive behaviors and spinal cord Fos protein expression. Intrathecal capsaicin-induced ablation of the central terminals of TRPV1+neurons greatly reduced the behavioral responses and Fos elicited by low-dose (0.5%) formalin. In contrast, genetic ablation of the MrgprD-expressing subset of non-peptidergic unmyelinated afferents, which constitute a largely non-overlapping population, altered neither the behavior nor the Fos induced by low-dose formalin. Remarkably, nocifensive behavior following high-dose (2%) formalin was unchanged in mice lacking either afferent population, or even in mice lacking both populations, which together make up the great majority of C-fiber nociceptors. Thus, at high doses, which are routinely used in the formalin test, formalin-induced "pain" behavior persists in the absence of the vast majority of C-fiber nociceptors, which points to a contribution of a large spectrum of afferents secondary to non-specific formalin-induced tissue and nerve damage.

Additional Information

© 2010 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. PMID: 20832171. Received 28 April 2010; revised 31 July 2010; accepted 3 August 2010. Available online 15 September 2010. This work was supported in part by NIH PO1NS048499 to DJA and AIB, NIH NS14627 to AIB and by a grant from the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation to HL. The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023