Publication | Open Access
Chronic stress influences nociceptive sensitivity of female rats in an estrous cycle-dependent manner
32
Citations
22
References
2019
Year
Pain MedicineDyspareuniaEstrous Cycle-dependent MannerFemale Reproductive FunctionMenstrual CycleSocial SciencesStressChronic StressStress HormoneBehavioral NeuroscienceWhether Stress ModulationBehavioral NeuroendocrinologyFemale RatsEndocrinologyPain ResearchInflammatory PainPhysiologyNeurosciencePain MechanismMedicine
Exposure to chronic stress can influence nociception and further induce hyperalgesia. Whether stress modulation of pain in female animals occurs in an estrous cycle-specific manner is still unclear. We profiled the changes in nociception (thermal, mechanical, formalin-evoked acute and inflammatory pain) of female Sprague-Dawley rats after treatment with chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) and investigated whether these changes occur in an estrous cycle-dependent manner. The results showed that CUMS female rats exhibited a lower mechanical withdrawal threshold in proestrus and estrus, a longer formalin-evoked licking time in metestrus and diestrus, but no changes in the latency time on the tail-flick test. The present study findings suggest that chronic stress induces mechanical and formalin-evoked acute hyperalgesia of female rats in an estrous cycle-dependent manner.SUMMARYOur studies showed that chronic stress increased nociceptive sensitivity of female rats. Furthermore females had different stress-induced pain responses in different estrous phases: mechanical hyperalgesia in proestrus and estrus, formalin-evoked acute hyperalgesia in metestrus and diestrus.
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