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Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals (2009)

Chapter: 2 Mechanisms of Pain

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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Suggested Citation:"2 Mechanisms of Pain." National Research Council. 2009. Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12526.
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Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

2 Mechanisms of Pain T his chapter provides an analysis of the differences between nocicep- tion and pain, on the basis of the anatomy of the peripheral and cen- tral nervous systems and the role of nociceptors in pain perception. It includes discussion of the concept of persistent pain and presents informa- tion on the embryologic origins of pain. Finally it addresses the modulatory role of anxiety, fear, and stress on pain. NOCICEPTION OR PAIN Before discussing the anatomical and physiological bases for the gener- ation of pain, it is important to reiterate the difference between nociception and pain. Nociception refers to the peripheral and central nervous system (CNS) processing of information about the internal or external environment, as generated by the activation of nociceptors. Typically, noxious stimuli, including tissue injury, activate nociceptors that are present in peripheral structures and that transmit information to the spinal cord dorsal horn or its trigeminal homologue, the nucleus caudalis. From there, the information continues to the brainstem and ultimately the cerebral cortex, where the perception of pain is generated (Figure 2-1). Pain is a product of higher brain center processing, whereas nocicep- tion can occur in the absence of pain. For example, the spinal cord of an individual who suffered a complete spinal cord transection can still process information transmitted by nociceptors, but because the information cannot be transmitted beyond the transection stimulus-evoked pain is unlikely (see Chapter 1 for additional discussion). 33

34 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS PAIN Cortex Decorticate Thalamus Decerebrate NOCICEPTION Brainstem Spinal Spinal cord Primary afferent nociceptors FIGURE 2-1 Anatomical distribution of nociception and pain. This figure sche- matizes the major neuroanatomical structures that differentiate nociception and pain, an understanding of which is essential for studies in which the animals may experience pain. Nociception refers to the process through which information about peripheral stimuli is transmitted by primary afferent nociceptors to the spinal cord, brainstem, thalamus, and subcorticalR01499 structures. In contrast, the experience of pain can result only when there is activity of 2-1 revised Figure thalamocortical networks (represented in the dark shaded box at the top) that process the information conveyed by pathways of nociception. The magnitude of pain is determined to a great extent by the strength of descending inhibitory and facilitatory controls (in the lighter shaded boxes) that originate throughout the neuraxis and regulate the processing of ascending nocicep- tive messages. The figure also illustrates several important surgical preparations used to study nociceptive processing under conditions in which different parts of the brain are disconnected from afferent nociceptive input. Thus, transection of the spinal cord produces a “spinal” preparation. Decerebrate preparation entails transection of the brain between the midbrain (at the level of the colliculi) and the thalamus. In the decorticate preparation, connections from the thalamus to the cortex are severed. In all of these conditions, information generated by the activity of nociceptors located below the level of transection is unlikely to reach structures above the transection. No evidence exists at present that hormonal or other nonneural mechanisms are able to “bypass” the transection to access the brain and evoke a pain perception.

3 MECHANISMS OF PAIN The distinction between nociception and pain is also important for behavioral studies in which an understanding of pain mechanisms is the ultimate goal. Many behavioral tests involve assessment of reflex responses to noxious stimuli, typically applied at threshold or just suprathreshold intensities (such as heating of the tail or the hindpaw) to incite a brief with- drawal of the tail (e.g., in the tail flick test) or paw. These are principally tests of nociceptive processing because stimulus duration is limited by the animal’s response (e.g., a nociceptive withdrawal reflex). On the other hand, the endpoints of more complex behaviors (e.g., those involved in operant tests) are presumed to involve supraspinal areas of the brain and as such are tests of both nociception and pain. In that respect, operant tests in which animals perform a particular behavior (e.g., press a bar) to escape a stimulus provide information about both nociceptive processing and pain (see also Box 1-4 in Chapter 1). Mechanisms of Nociception and Pain Nociceptors The anatomical basis for the generation of momentary pain is very well understood (Basbaum and Jessell 2000). Nociceptors are unusual neurons because they have a cell body with a peripheral axon and terminal (ending) that responds to the stimulus and a central branch that carries the informa- tion into the CNS. Briefly, there are two major classes of nociceptors that respond to different modalities of noxious stimuli. The largest group of nociceptors is associated with unmyelinated axons, also called C-fibers, that conduct slowly and that respond to noxious ther- mal, mechanical, or chemical stimulation. Proteins in the membrane of these nociceptors transduce natural thermal, mechanical, or chemical stim- ulus energy into electrical impulses, which in turn are propagated along the peripheral and central axon of the nociceptor into the CNS (the spinal cord for the body and the trigeminal nucleus for the head). Importantly, biochemical and molecular analysis of the nociceptor has identified many of the transducer molecules that are activated by noxious stimuli, such as TRPV1, which responds to noxious heat, reduced pH as occurs in inflam- mation, and the chemical capsaicin. Another channel, TRPM8, responds to cold (Julius and Basbaum 2001). Many of these molecules are targets for therapeutic intervention in clinical pain conditions. The second major nociceptor population is associated with thinly myelinated axons (A-delta fibers). These nociceptors conduct more rapidly than do unmyelinated C-fibers and likely convey “fast” (or sharp) momen-

36 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS tary pain, as opposed to slow, diffuse pain, which is transmitted by the C-fibers.1 There is yet one more category of nociceptors characterized by unique properties. “Sleeping” or “silent” nociceptors are typically unresponsive to noxious intensities of mechanical stimulation except at extreme ranges of intensity. Although silent nociceptors are difficult to activate within the nor- mal range of noxious stimulus intensities, after tissue insult these nocicep- tors “wake up” in response to endogenous chemical mediators associated with tissue injury. Silent nociceptors are typically associated with increased spontaneous activity and responsiveness to noxious and even innocuous stimulus intensities. Spontaneous activity in nociceptors (whether A-delta, C-, or silent) is undesirable and pain producing; moreover, awakening silent nocicep- tors creates essentially new, additional nociceptive input to the CNS. All nociceptors have the capacity to sensitize. When they become more eas- ily excitable (i.e., the threshold for activation is lowered), hyperalgesia (an increased response to a noxious stimulus) with or without allodynia develops and normally innocuous stimuli may provoke pain, thus directly affecting animal welfare. The consequences of such activities are discussed below in the section on persistent pain. The Central Nerous System The central branch of the nociceptor terminates in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord (or its trigeminal homologue in the brainstem), where it makes synaptic connections with a complex array of neurons that play different roles in nociceptive processing and pain. Some interneurons make connec- tions with motor neurons that generate nociceptive withdrawal reflexes. Output neurons of the spinal cord, on the other hand, project rostrally and transmit the nociceptive message to the brainstem reticular formation and thalamus. Among the ascending pathways arising from the spinal cord (and its trigeminal homologue) are the spinothalamic and spinoreticulothalamic tracts, as well as the spinoparabrachial-amygdala pathway, which provides more direct access to limbic emotional circuits in the brain (via the amyg- dala) (Basbaum and Jessell 2000). Note that there is not a unitary pathway for generation of the affective component of the pain experience. Rather it is likely that different aspects of the nociceptive message are conveyed via different pathways and widely distributed to the cerebral cortex from the reticular formation, thalamus, and amygdala. 1 Whereas virtually all nociceptors are A-delta and C-fibers, not all A-delta and C-fibers are nociceptors. It is thus both inaccurate and incorrect to generically refer to C-fibers as “pain” fibers.

3 MECHANISMS OF PAIN Until recently, remarkably little was understood about the cortical mechanisms that underlie the perception of pain. Although electrophysi- ological studies have demonstrated that some neurons in the cortex respond to noxious stimuli, the extent to which this response represents or even correlates with pain was not clear. The development of powerful imaging methods, however, has provided critical information about the cortical pro- cessing of pain-related information (e.g., Apkarian et al. 2005; Bingel and Tracey 2008; Tracey and Mantyh 2007) and revealed that pain is not pro- cessed in a single area of the brain. Rather, the activity of different regions of the cortex underlies various features of the pain percept and cognitive recall for responses or emotional reactions. This information comes largely from human studies, in which a verbal correlate of pain perception is possible. For example, activity in the somatosensory cortices (S1 and S2) correlates best with the sensory-discriminative properties of the stimulus (e.g., loca- tion and intensity), and the affective components of the pain experience correlate with activity in the anterior cingulate gyrus and the insular cortex. Unfortunately, the activity of these regions cannot be used as a biomarker for pain, as it can also be generated by conditions that are clearly not pain- ful (for additional discussion see Chapter 1). Further Comments on the Distinction between Nociception and Pain An unusual model to investigate the brain circuitry involved in noci- ception and pain was developed at the beginning of the 20th century by Charles Sherrington (1906), who appreciated early on the distinction between nociception and pain. Use of a “decerebrate preparation” (cer eau isolé) in laboratory animal research was more common years ago, but it remains useful for recording the activity of spinal cord or brainstem neurons under conditions not compromised by anesthetics or analgesics. With the animals under deep general anesthesia, the procedure involves transection of the brainstem at the level of the midbrain (typically between the inferior and superior colliculi), after which the rostral part of the brain (particularly subcortical structures and the cortex) no longer receives direct neuronal input from the spinal cord or brainstem trigeminal structures and a state of permanent unconsciousness is induced. Using the decerebrate preparation, Woodworth and Sherrington (1904) illustrated the essential contribution of the cortex to the perception of pain and defined the “pseudaffective” reflex. In response to a noxious stimulus, this reflex corresponds to a remarkable behavioral repertoire, even including occasional vocalization, due to the fact that its pathways are coordinated at spinal and supraspinal brainstem levels below the midbrain transection (i.e., it is a spino-bulbo-spinal reflex; Woodworth and Sherrington 1904). Despite the behaviors observed, no pain is experienced. In fact, the AVMA

38 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS Guidelines on Euthanasia state that “for pain to be experienced, the cerebral cortex and subcortical structures must be functional” (AVMA 2007, p. 2). The pseudaffective reflex is useful in animal studies that investigate neurons of the spinal cord without the influence of anesthesia (e.g., the decerebrate animal preparation). It should be noted that decerebrate preparations are necessarily nonsurvival experiments; Silverman and colleagues (2005, p. 1) note that an animal that recovers from the anesthesia for this procedure typically provides research data “for a period of a few hours or a day” after which it must be euthanized. Because decerebration severs the connection between the rostral part of the brain and lower CNS structures, it also eliminates the powerful modulatory control mechanisms that descend from supraspinal sites. These descending control mechanisms are predominantly inhibitory and act as a “brake” on spinal cord neurons and circuits that process nociceptive infor- mation. Their removal via decerebration leads to enhanced nociceptive reflexes and spinal neuron responses to nociceptive input. Accordingly, spinal cord transection often follows decerebration to enable physiological studies in unanesthetized animals, but it is not a prerequisite of the decer- ebrate preparation. Finally, it is important to distinguish the decerebrate from the decorti- cate preparation. In the latter, only the cerebral cortex is removed, leaving intact the underlying subcortical structures (i.e., the thalamus, brainstem, and spinal cord). Because there have been suggestions that under some conditions pain processing can occur even at the level of the thalamus (e.g., Merker 2007), studies of decorticate animals (which these days are rare) must be performed under general anesthesia. THE DEVELOPMENT OF PERSISTENT PAIN The mechanisms that contribute to the development of postoperative/ postprocedural and persistent pain are far more complicated than the rather simple anatomical and physiological underpinnings of momentary pain. It is important to appreciate that these types of pain are not merely instances of momentary pain that do not resolve quickly. Rather, they arise in the con- text and environment of tissue or nerve injury and involve changes in the properties not only of nociceptors but also of the circuits that these recep- tors engage in the spinal cord and at other levels of the neuraxis (Basbaum and Woolf 1999; Urban and Gebhart 1999; Basbaum and Jessell 2000; Julius and Basbaum 2001). These changes generally enhance signals in “pain” transmission circuits, such that innocuous stimuli can evoke behav- iors indicative of pain (extensive discussion of the sickness syndrome, an underappreciated postoperative occurrence, is in Chapter 4). As a result of advances in scientific understanding of these mechanisms, many pharma- cological treatments for postoperative/-procedural and persistent pain in

3 MECHANISMS OF PAIN humans are directed at interfering with the development and duration of hyperalgesia and allodynia. Hyperalgesia is a hallmark of inflammatory pain and is a consequence of many types of tissue insults (ranging from a skin incision to nerve injury). It is defined as an increased response to a noxious stimulus and mani- fests as an increased sensitivity to pain (Treede et al. 1992; Campbell and Meyer 2006). Because the threshold for response also typically decreases, sometimes even nonnoxious stimuli can cause pain, a phenomenon called allodynia. There are two types of hyperalgesia, primary and secondary, each associated with different mechanisms. Primary hyperalgesia is character- ized by increased excitability of nociceptors at the site of the insult (e.g., the site of an incision). It occurs most commonly after skin injury, but may also develop following insults to joints, muscle, or viscera. For example, when an incision in the skin is examined, the response to stimuli applied to that site typically increases. Surrounding the site of injury, and often at sites rather distant from the injury (particularly when joints and especially the viscera are involved), is an area of increased sensitivity referred to as the area of secondary hyperalgesia. This is most evident with visceral insult, where sensations are referred or perceived to arise from overlying structures, most notably skin. The classic example is myocardial oxygen deficiency (angina) in which the pain is referred to the shoulder, down the left arm, and occasionally up to the jaw. When either primary or secondary hyperalgesia occurs, it is accom- panied by an increase in the excitability and responses of neurons in the nervous system. Primary hyperalgesia is largely attributed to an increase in the excitability of nociceptors (i.e., the peripheral afferent sensory ending and fiber), whereas secondary hyperalgesia is associated with changes in the excitability of neurons in the CNS, including the spinal cord and supra- spinal sites in the brain. Accordingly, primary hyperalgesia is associated with peripheral sensitization of nociceptors and secondary hyperalgesia with central sensitization. The terms indicate an increase in the excitability and responses of peripheral (i.e., nociceptor) and central neurons because of tissue insult. Numerous mediators in both the peripheral and central nervous systems contribute to the processes of sensitization (Basbaum and Jessell 2000; Basbaum and Woolf 1999; Julius and Basbaum 2001; Treede et al. 1992; see McMahon et al. 2005 for an overview). At the injury site, primary hyperalgesia is induced by the release of numerous inflammatory mediators including the products of cyclooxygenase enzyme activation. The critical contribution of these enzymes accounts for the beneficial effects of non- steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which, by inhibiting the enzyme, reduce peripheral sensitization and help alleviate persistent or postoperative/ -procedural pain.

40 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS Central sensitization is a considerably more complicated process that can result from changes in the amount of neurotransmitter released from nociceptor terminals in the spinal cord or brainstem, notably glutamate and the neuropeptide substance P (Basbaum and Jessell 2000; Basbaum and Woolf 1999; Woolf 1983); from loss of inhibitory regulation exerted by inhibitory interneurons in the spinal cord and at supraspinal loci; and from biochemical changes in the “pain” transmission neurons that increase their responsiveness to peripheral inputs. It is likely that the pain-alleviating effects of drugs such as ketamine are partly due to the reduction of central sensitization produced by the release of glutamate. In contrast, the benefi- cial effects of anticonvulsants for pain treatment are likely related to their blockade of neurotransmitter release from primary afferents or the enhance- ment of inhibitory controls. The remarkable number of molecules implicated in central sensitization (whether produced by tissue or nerve injury) may lead to the development of new pharmacological approaches to managing persistent pain. Of par- ticular interest is the recent understanding of the contribution of glia to the process of central sensitization. In fact, there is considerable evidence that glia, notably microglia and astrocytes, are activated in the setting of nerve injury and that they are the source of mediators that enhance the central consequences of nociceptor activity (Thacker et al. 2007; Watkins et al. 2007). For this reason, there are now several pharmaceutical programs for the development of novel pain therapies that attempt to interfere with the biochemistry of the “activated” glial cell. ONTOGENY OF PAIN Large numbers of developmental neurobiology studies have increased knowledge of the origin and maturation of nociceptive circuitry and behav- ior. Importantly, it is now possible to identify subpopulations of sensory neu- rons, including nociceptors, early in embryonic development, well before they project to central and peripheral targets (Fitzgerald 2005). Neurogenesis and subsequent maturation and synaptogenesis of sen- sory neurons occur in two waves. In rats, outgrowth of myelinated A-delta fibers from the neuraxis precedes outgrowth of unmyelinated C-fibers. These processes occur during embryonic days 15 to 17 (E15-17) and 18 to 20 (E18-20) respectively and coincide with the first appearance of reflex responses to mechanical stimuli (Fitzgerald 2005). A-delta fiber synapses have been identified in the spinal dorsal horn at E13 in rats, whereas the terminals of C-fibers do not appear until E18-19 (ibid.). In fact, physiologi- cal recordings of nociceptive fibers in rat pups during the first few postnatal days demonstrate responses to noxious chemical, mechanical, and thermal stimuli that are similar to those of mature C-fibers.

41 MECHANISMS OF PAIN Neonates of multiple species demonstrate exaggerated spinally medi- ated reflex responses to noxious stimuli compared to adults (see Fitzgerald 2005 and Hathway and Fitzgerald 2008 for reviews). For example, in rat pups it is not until postnatal day 10 (P10) that these reflexes develop spa- tial precision; they then achieve adult levels of both spatial and temporal precision by P21. Nonnoxious tactile stimuli are important for fine-tuning of nociceptive reflexes during this critical postnatal period. Likewise, matu- ration of ascending and descending neuronal pathways, at approximately P10 in rat pups, contributes to the development of mature nociceptive processing. Hyperalgesia can be documented in rat pups as young as 3 days of age, but it is significantly less prominent, both in magnitude and duration, at early ages than it is in the adult animal. By approximately 34 to 40 days of age, adult-like hyperalgesia is evident (Jiang and Gebhart 1998). Taken together, these observations demonstrate the maturation of synaptic connections in the superficial laminae of the dorsal horn during the first 3 postnatal weeks (Fitzgerald 2005). Both somatic and visceral tissue insults in the neonate appear to alter processing of nociceptive inputs in adulthood. Neonatal injury has thus been associated with either hyperalgesia or hypoalgesia, depending on the type and severity of injury and the sensory modality tested (Bhutta et al. 2001). Colorectal distension in neonatal rats (P8-12) results in colon hyper- sensitivity in adults (Al-Chaer et al. 2000). In addition to altered nocicep- tive processing, repetitive or persistent pain in the neonatal period leads to changes in brain development, widespread alterations in animal behavior, and increased vulnerability to stress and anxiety disorders or chronic pain syndromes (Anand et al. 1999, 2007; Al-Chaer et al. 2000; Bhutta et al. 2001). Specifically, inflammation produced by repeated injections of complete Freund’s adjuvant in rat pups (P0, P3, P14) leads to hyperalgesia and last- ing changes in nociceptive circuitry of the adult dorsal horn (Ruda et al. 2000). Similarly, rat pups that received repeated formalin injections in the paw developed generalized thermal hypoalgesia as they aged (Bhutta et al. 2001). When noxious formalin stimuli were preceded by morphine anal- gesia in neonatal rats, hyperalgesia in adulthood was significantly reduced (ibid.). In other models of persisent pain, rat pups less than 21 days old did not develop signs of neuropathic pain after nerve injury (Howard et al. 2005). Whereas a growing number of studies have demonstrated altered pain processing after neonatal injury in humans, not all outcomes reported are necessarily applicable to the laboratory animal (e.g., see Grunau and Tu 2007). However, an important conclusion from this body of research is that untreated neonatal pain can permanently alter sensitivity to pain, consistent with modulation of primary afferent activation and central sensitization in

42 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS response to subsequent nociceptive challenges in adulthood. Thus measures to minimize pain in neonates may reduce alterations in neuronal develop- ment and long-term sensitivity to sensory stimuli. MODULATORY INFLUENCES ON PAIN: ANXIETY, FEAR, AND STRESS As noted above, pain is not merely the appreciation of the presence, location, and magnitude of nociceptive input but rather a complex event with an important emotional/affective component. In addition, psychologi- cal factors can significantly influence the experience of pain (also discussed in Chapter 1, text and Figure 1-1). For example, fear and anxiety can enhance responses to and interpretation of pain-producing events (Hunt and Mantyh 2001; Linton 2000; Morley 1999; Munro 2007; Perkins and Kehlet 2000; Ploghaus et al. 2001). For these reasons, the predisposition of certain strains of animals or individuals to anxiety should be considered in efforts to assess the possible contribution of anxiety to the experience of pain (Ulrich-Lai et al. 2006). In humans, measures to reduce anxiety can reduce pain—this is true for both behavioral (cognitive) interventions and anxiolytic drugs (Belzung 2001). Similarly, behavioral interventions to reduce anxiety in animals can include acclimation to human handlers, training to withstand some research procedures, socialization and housing with cage mates, or training and exercise. Reliable and reproducible testing of animals is best achieved in a situation in which the animal is habituated to the test appara- tus and the test environment (e.g., light, noise, temperature, humidity). The extent to which stress is present in normal laboratory situations should also be considered. There are numerous examples in which expo- sure to stressors can influence the response to a noxious stimulus. Some- what paradoxically, the response can manifest as an apparent reduction of pain, a phenomenon referred to as “stress-induced analgesia” (Amit and Galina 1986; Keogh and Cochrane 2002; for commentary on how exposure to a predator reduces nociceptive responses in rats see Lester and Fanselow 1985). Moreover, environmental enrichment may also affect stress-related nociceptive responses. A recent study reported that C3H mice exposed to environmental enrichment, which can reduce stress compared with a stan- dard environment (i.e., standard plastic cages with bedding), reacted more quickly (i.e., exhibited a shorter freezing time) to electric shock training than did mice habituated in standard housing conditions. Such an outcome, possibly due to decreased fearfulness or anxiety, may require more nuanced staff training in recognizing modulatory influences on painful situations (Benaroya-Milshtein et al. 2004). Whether the magnitude of stress experienced in typical laboratory set- tings is sufficient to significantly alter the perception of pain is difficult to determine. A priori one would assume that reducing stress is a good objec-

43 MECHANISMS OF PAIN tive for both experimental outcomes and animal welfare, since perturbation of the latter may lead to stress/distress (see the 2008 NRC report Recognition and Alleiation of Distress in Laboratory Animals for detailed information on the effects of stress/distress on animal welfare). The stressors typically used to evoke stress-induced analgesia are intense and rather unnatural and can be useful for evaluating pain behavior in response to an applied stimulus. How data from such studies translate into the normal behavioral repertoire of animals in a laboratory environment and in other types of experimental studies remains to be determined. Nevertheless, it is important to keep in mind the possibility of stress-induced effects when assessing pain in animals because the absence of response to a noxious stimulus or of pain-indica- tive behavior may be due to significant stress and misleadingly suggest the absence of pain. Because pain can be enhanced by anxiety or fear, readers should consult the discussion of the role of anxiolytics in pain management in Chapter 4. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS Pain is not a foregone outcome when an animal is exposed to a nox- ious stimulus, because, as discussed in Chapter 1, the experience of pain is informed by the perceptive abilities of the brain. 1. It is critical to appreciate that nociception is not equivalent to pain. Noxious stimuli trigger several levels of information processing as the activity of primary afferent nociceptors is conveyed to the spinal cord and from there to the higher centers of the brain. Neurons at many levels of the neuraxis respond to noxious stimuli, but that response does not necessarily indicate or lead to pain. In fact, stud- ies of animals with transections of the neuraxis at various levels illustrate that complex responses can be elicited in the absence of pain (i.e., when the cortex is disconnected from the nociceptive processing networks). 2. Until better methods (e.g., biomarkers, imaging) are available to objectively measure pain, behavioral indices and to some extent extrapolation from the human experience are the best sources of information and the only methods available to assess pain in labo- ratory animals (see Chapter 3). 3. Pain is not exclusively associated with noxious stimuli. After some injuries (e.g., nerve injury), even innocuous stimuli can cause pain, and repeated exposure to noxious stimuli can lead to sensitization and enhance responses to subsequent stimuli both innocuous and noxious. 4. Injury may have long-term consequences to the neural systems

44 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS that process nociceptive information. This is particularly true of procedures performed in the neonatal animal, but it may also be relevant in the adult. This information underscores the importance of adequate postoperative pain management and to some extent provides the rationale for preemptive analgesia (see Chapter 4). Psychological factors also likely contribute to the pain experienced during and after an injury; their effect is perhaps more difficult to assess and address in the context of laboratory experiments, but its recognition is important. 5. Pain represents a cascade of physiological, immunological, cogni- tive, and behavioral effects that may confound experimental results in addition to being detrimental to the animals’ welfare. Finally, and as discussed in Chapter 1, unless not recommended due to experimental outcomes, relief from pain is an ethical and regulatory obliga- tion. Further, the committee emphasizes that effective pain management is scientifically advantageous, as unalleviated pain may adversely influence scientific projects and research outcomes in a number of ways. The reader is referred to Box 1-4 of Chapter 1 and to Chapter 4 for an extended discus- sion of the consequences of unrelieved pain. REFERENCES Al-Chaer ED, Kawasaki M, Pasricha PJ. 2000. A new model of chronic visceral hypersensitivity in adult rats induced by colon irritation during postnatal development. Gastroenterology 119(5):1276-1285. Amit Z, Galina ZH. 1986. Stress-induced analgesia: Adaptive pain suppression. Physiol Rev 66(4):1091-1120. Anand KJ, Coskun V, Thrivikraman KV, Nemeroff CB, Plotsky PM. 1999. Long-term behavioral effects of repetitive pain in neonatal rat pups. Physiol Behav 66:627-637. Anand KJ, Garg S, Rovnaghi CR, Narsinghani U, Bhutta AT, Hall RW. 2007. Ketamine re- duces the cell death following inflammatory pain in newborn rat brain. Pediatr Res 62:283-90. Apkarian AV, Bushnell MC, Treede RD, Zubieta JK. 2005. Human brain mechanisms of pain perception and regulation in health and disease. Eur J Pain 9(4):463-484. AVMA (American Veterinary Medical Association). 2007. AVMA Guidelines on Euthana- sia. Available at www.avma.org/issues/animal_welfare/euthanasia.pdf. Accessed June 9, 2008. Basbaum A, Jessell T. 2000. The perception of pain. In: Kandel ER, Schwartz JH, Jessell TM, eds. Principles of Neural Science, 4th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, Health Professions Division. Basbaum AI, Woolf CJ. 1999. Pain. Curr Biol 9:R429-R431. Belzung C. 2001. The genetic basis of the pharmacological effects of anxiolytics: A review based on rodent models. Behav Pharmacol 12(6-7):451-460. Benaroya-Milshtein N, Hollander N, Apter A, Kukulansky T, Raz N, Wilf A, Yaniv I, Pick CG. 2004. Environmental enrichment in mice decreases anxiety, attenuates stress responses and enhances natural killer cell activity. Eur J Neurosci 20(5):1341-1347.

4 MECHANISMS OF PAIN Bhutta AT, Rovnaghi C, Simpson PM, Gossett JM, Scalzo FM, Anand KJ. 2001. Interactions of inflammatory pain and morphine in infant rats: Long-term behavioral effects. Physiol Behav 73(1-2):51-58. Bingel U, Tracey I. 2008. Imaging CNS modulation of pain in humans. Physiology 23(6): 371-380. Campbell JN, Meyer RA. 2006. Mechanisms of neuropathic pain. Neuron 52(1):77-92. Fitzgerald M. 2005. The development of nociceptive circuits. Nat Rev Neurosci 6(7): 507-520. Grunau RE, Tu MT. 2007. Long-term consequences of pain in human neonates. In: Anand KJ, McGrath PJ, Stevens B, eds. Pain in Neonates and Infants, 3rd Ed. Pain Research and Clinical Management. Amsterdam: Elsevier. pp. 45-55. Hathway GJ, Fitzgerald MF. 2008. The development of nociceptive systems. In: Bushnell MC, Basbaum AI, eds. The Senses: A Comprehensive Reference, Vol. 5. Pain. San Diego: Academic Press. pp. 133-145. Howard RF, Walker SM, Mota PM, Fitzgerald M. 2005. The ontogeny of neuropathic pain: Postnatal onset of mechanical allodynia in rat spared nerve injury (SNI) and chronic constriction injury (CCI) models. Pain 115(3):382-389. Hunt SP, Mantyh PW. 2001. The molecular dynamics of pain control. Nat Rev Neurosci 2(2):83-91. Jiang MC, Gebhart GF. 1998. Development of mustard oil-induced hyperalgesia in rats. Pain 77(3):305-313. Julius D, Basbaum AI. 2001. Molecular mechanisms of nociception. Nature 413:203-210. Keogh E, Cochrane M. 2002. Anxiety sensitivity, cognitive biases, and the experience of pain. J Pain 3(4):320-329. Lester LS, Fanselow MS. 1985. Exposure to a cat produces opioid analgesia in rats. Behav Neurosci 99(4):756-759. Linton SJ. 2000. A review of psychological risk factors in back and neck pain. Spine 25(9): 1148-1156. McMahon SB, Bennett DL, Bevan S. 2005. Inflammatory mediators and modulators of pain. In: Koltzenburg M, McMahon S, eds. Wall and Melzack’s Textbook of Pain 5th ed. Churchill- Livingstone. pp. 49-72. Merker B. 2007. Consciousness without a cerebral cortex: A challenge for neuroscience and medicine. Behav Brain Sci 30(1):63-81; discussion 81-134. Morley JS. 1999. New perspectives in our use of opioids. Pain Forum 8(4):200-205. Munro G. 2007. Dopamine D(1) and D(2) receptor agonism enhances antinociception medi- ated by the serotonin and noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor duloxetine in the rat formalin test. Eur J Pharmacol 575(1-3):66-74. NRC (National Research Council). 2008. Recognition and Alleviation of Distress in Laboratory Animals. Washington: National Academies Press. Perkins FM, Kehlet H. 2000. Chronic pain as an outcome of surgery: A review of predictive factors. Anesthesiology 93(4):1123-1133. Ploghaus A, Narain C, Beckmann CF, Clare S, Bantick S, Wise R, Matthews PM, Rawlins JN, Tracey I. 2001. Exacerbation of pain by anxiety is associated with activity in a hippocam- pal network. J Neurosci 21(24):9896-9903. Ruda MA, Ling QD, Hohmann AG, Peng YB, Tachibana T. 2000. Altered nociceptive neuronal circuits after neonatal peripheral inflammation. Science 289(5479):628-631. Sherrington CS. 1906. The Integrative Action of the Nervous System. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. Silverman J, Garnett NL, Giszter SF, Heckman CJ II, Kulpa-Eddy JA, Lemay MA, Perry CK, Pinter M. 2005. Decerebrate mammalian preparations: Unalleviated or fully alleviated pain? A review and opinion. Cont Top Lab Anim 44(4):34-36.

46 RECOGNITION AND ALLEVIATION OF PAIN IN LABORATORY ANIMALS Thacker MA, Clark AK, Marchand F, McMahon SB. 2007. Pathophysiology of peripheral neu- ropathic pain: Immune cells and molecules. Anesth Analg 105(3):838-847. Tracey I, Mantyh PW. 2007. The cerebral signature for pain perception and its modulation. Neuron 55(3):377-391. Treede RD, Meyer RA, Raja SN, Campbell JN. 1992. Peripheral and central mechanisms of cutaneous hyperalgesia. Prog Neurobiol 38(4):397-421. Ulrich-Lai YM, Xie W, Meij JT, Dolgas CM, Yu L, Herman JP. 2006. Limbic and HPA axis func- tion in an animal model of chronic neuropathic pain. Physiol Behav 88(1-2):67-76. Urban MO, Gebhart GF. 1999. Supraspinal contributions to hyperalgesia. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96:7687-7692. Watkins LR, Hutchinson MR, Milligan ED, Maier SF. 2007. “Listening” and “talking” to neu- rons: Implications of immune activation for pain control and increasing the efficacy of opioids. Brain Res Rev 56(1):148-169. Woodworth RS, Sherrington CS. 1904. A pseudoaffective reflex and its spinal path. J Physiol (Lond) 31:234-243. Woolf CJ. 1983. Evidence for a central component of post-injury pain hypersensitivity. Nature 306(5944):686-688.

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The use of animals in research adheres to scientific and ethical principles that promote humane care and practice. Scientific advances in our understanding of animal physiology and behavior often require theories to be revised and standards of practice to be updated to improve laboratory animal welfare.

Recognition and Alleviation of Pain in Laboratory Animals, the second of two reports revising the 1992 publication Recognition and Alleviation of Pain and Distress in Laboratory Animals from the Institute for Laboratory Animal Research (ILAR), focuses on pain experienced by animals used in research. This book aims to educate laboratory animal veterinarians; students, researchers and investigators; Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee members; and animal care staff and animal welfare officers on the current scientific and ethical issues associated with pain in laboratory animals. It evaluates pertinent scientific literature to generate practical and pragmatic guidelines for recognizing and alleviating pain in laboratory animals, focusing specifically on the following areas: physiology of pain in commonly used laboratory species; pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic principles to control pain; identification of humane endpoints; and principles for minimizing pain associated with experimental procedures. Finally, the report identifies areas in which further scientific investigation is needed to improve laboratory animal welfare.

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