Sildenafil Treatment Eliminates Pruritogenesis and Thermal Hyperalgesia in Rats with Portacaval Shunts

Fecha de publicación:

Autores de CIPF

Participantes ajenos a CIPF

  • Belghiti, M

Grupos de Investigación

Abstract

Pruritus is a common symptom in chronic liver diseases, which may also alter thermal sensitivity. The underlying mechanisms remain unclear and treatments are not satisfactory. Portal-systemic shunting has been proposed to alter thermal sensitivity in cirrhotics. Inflamma-tion-induced enhanced activity of the Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) may contribute to pruritus and thermal hyperalgesia. Sildenafil reduces neuroinflam-mation in portacaval shunt (PCS) rats. The aims were to assess whether: (1) PCS rats show enhanced scratching or thermal sensitivity; (2) TRPV1 activity is enhanced in PCS rats; (3) treatment with sildenafil reduces TRPV1 activation, scratching and thermal hyperalgesia. Rats were treated with sildenafil beginning 3 weeks after surgery. The number of scratches performed were counted. Thermal hyperalgesia was analyzed using the Hargreaves' Plantar Test. TRPV1 activation by measuring the increase in Ca2+ induced by capsaicin in dorsal root ganglia neurons. PCS rats show enhanced scratching behavior, reaching 66 +/- 5 scratches/ h (p < 0.01) at 21 days after surgery, while controls show 37 +/- 2 scratches/ h. PCS rats show thermal hyperalgesia. Paw withdrawal latency was reduced (p < 0.05) to 10 +/- 1 s compared to controls (21 +/- 2 s). Capsaicin-induced calcium increase was higher in dorsal root ganglia cultures from PCS rats, indicating TRPV1functional increase. PCS rats show enhanced scratching behavior and thermal sensitivity and are a good model to study these alterations in chronic liver diseases. Enhanced sensitivity and activity of TRPV1 channel underlies these alterations. Treatment with sildenafil reduces TRPV1 channel sensitivity and activity and normalizes scratching behavior and thermal sensitivity.

Datos de la publicación

ISSN/ISSNe:
0364-3190, 1573-6903

NEUROCHEMICAL RESEARCH  SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS

Tipo:
Article
Páginas:
788-794
PubMed:
27321307

Documentos

  • No hay documentos

Métricas

Filiaciones mostrar / ocultar

Keywords

  • Pruritus; Thermal sensitivity; Portal-systemic shunting; Sildenafil; TRPV1

Campos de Estudio

Proyectos asociados

Bases moleculares de las alteraciones neurológicas (cognitivas y motoras) en hiperamonemia y encefalopatía hepática. Implicaciones terapéuticas

Investigador Principal: VICENTE FELIPO ORTS

MINISTERIO DE ECON. Y COMPET. . 2015

Red de Transtornos Adictivos

Investigador Principal: CONSUELO GUERRI SIRERA

INSTITUTO DE SALUD CARLOS III . 2017

Compartir