Assessment of the potential role of muscle spindle mechanoreceptor afferents in chronic muscle pain in the rat masseter muscle
Article [Accepted Manuscript]
Abstract(s)
Background: The phenotype of large diameter sensory afferent neurons changes in several models of neuropathic pain. We
asked if similar changes also occur in ‘‘functional’’ pain syndromes.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Acidic saline (AS, pH 4.0) injections into the masseter muscle were used to induce
persistent myalgia. Controls received saline at pH 7.2. Nocifensive responses of Experimental rats to applications of Von Frey
Filaments to the masseters were above control levels 1–38 days post-injection. This effect was bilateral. Expression of c-Fos
in the Trigeminal Mesencephalic Nucleus (NVmes), which contains the somata of masseter muscle spindle afferents (MSA),
was above baseline levels 1 and 4 days after AS. The resting membrane potentials of neurons exposed to AS (n = 167) were
hyperpolarized when compared to their control counterparts (n = 141), as were their thresholds for firing, high frequency
membrane oscillations (HFMO), bursting, inward and outward rectification. The amplitude of HFMO was increased and
spontaneous ectopic firing occurred in 10% of acid-exposed neurons, but never in Controls. These changes appeared within
the same time frame as the observed nocifensive behaviour. Ectopic action potentials can travel centrally, but also
antidromically to the peripheral terminals of MSA where they could cause neurotransmitter release and activation of
adjacent fibre terminals. Using immunohistochemistry, we confirmed that annulospiral endings of masseter MSA express
the glutamate vesicular transporter VGLUT1, indicating that they can release glutamate. Many capsules also contained fine
fibers that were labelled by markers associated with nociceptors (calcitonin gene-related peptide, Substance P, P2X3
receptors and TRPV1 receptors) and that expressed the metabotropic glutamate receptor, mGluR5. Antagonists of
glutamatergic receptors given together with the 2nd injection of AS prevented the hypersensitivity observed bilaterally but
were ineffective if given contralaterally.
Conclusions/Significance: Low pH leads to changes in several electrical properties of MSA, including initiation of ectopic
action potentials which could propagate centrally but could also invade the peripheral endings causing glutamate release
and activation of nearby nociceptors within the spindle capsule. This peripheral drive could contribute both to the transition
to, and maintenance of, persistent muscle pain as seen in some ‘‘functional’’ pain syndromes.
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