Involvement of cholecystokininergic systems in anxiety-induced hyperalgesia in male rats: Behavioral and biochemical studies

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Abstract

Keeping in mind the increased pain complaints reported in anxious or depressive patients, our goal was to investigate in rats the consequences of an experimentally provoked state of anxiety/depression on pain behavior and on its underlying mechanisms. We therefore used a model of social defeat consisting of a 30 min protected confrontation followed by a 15 min physical confrontation, repeated during 4 d, that elicited symptoms close to those observed in humans with anxiety or depression. Indeed, 5 d later, animals subjected to social-defeat confrontation were characterized by a decrease of sweet-water consumption and of body weight, and a hyperactivity of the hypothalamic- pituitary-adrenal axis, suggesting that the social-defeat procedure induced a prolonged state of anxiety. Rats subjected to the social-defeat procedure showed an enhanced nociceptive behavior to the subcutaneous administration of formalin, 5 d after the last confrontation session. Because chronic treatment with the established anxiolytic chlordiazepoxide (10 mg · kg-1 · d-1) prevented hyperalgesia, this strongly suggested that this experimental procedure might be a suitable animal model of "anxiety-induced hyperalgesia." Hyperalgesia associated with anxiety not only was related to a significant increase of CCKLM [cholecystokinin (CCK)-like material] in frontal cortex microdialysates but also was prevented by a CCK-B receptor antagonist [4-[[2-[[3-(1H-indol-3-yl)-2-methyl-1-oxo- 2[[(tricyclo[3.3[12,17]dec-2-yloxy)-carbonyl]amino]-propyl]amino]-1-phenyethyl] amino]-4-oxo-[R-(R*,R*)]-butanoate N-methyl-D-glucamine (CI-988)] (2 mg/kg), strongly supporting the involvement of central CCKergic systems in these phenomena. Finally, combined treatments with CI-988 and morphine completely suppressed pain-related behavior, supporting the idea that the association of both compounds might represent a new therapeutic approach to reduce the increase of pain complaints highly prevalent among anxious or depressive patients. Copyright © 2005 Society for Neuroscience.

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APA

Andre, J., Zeau, B., Pohl, M., Cesselin, F., Benoliel, J. J., & Becker, C. (2005). Involvement of cholecystokininergic systems in anxiety-induced hyperalgesia in male rats: Behavioral and biochemical studies. Journal of Neuroscience, 25(35), 7896–7904. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0743-05.2005

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