Continuous perfusion with morphine of the orbitofrontal cortex reduces allodynia and hyperalgesia in a rat model for mononeuropathy
Author: Al Amin HA, Atweh SF, Baki SA, Jabbur SJ, Saadé NE.
Source:
Neuroscience letters, 364(1), 27-31.
Recent imaging reports demonstrate the activation of the orbitofrontal cortical
(OFC) area during acute and chronic pain. The aim of this study was to compare
the effects of chronic perfusion of this area with morphine on nociception in
control rats and in rats subjected to mononeuropathy. Chronic perfusion of
morphine, using miniosmotic pumps, produced significant and naloxone-reversible
depression of tactile and cold allodynias and thermal hyperalgesia, observed in
neuropathic rats, while it produced significant elevation and naloxone
insensitive increase of acute nociceptive thresholds in control rats. The
observed results support the idea that this area is a component of a flexible
cerebral network involved in pain processing and perception