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Sodium Channel Blockers Modulate Abnormal Activity of Regenerating Nociceptive Corneal Nerves After Surgical Lesion

Título :
Sodium Channel Blockers Modulate Abnormal Activity of Regenerating Nociceptive Corneal Nerves After Surgical Lesion
Autor :
Luna, Carolina
Mizerska, Kamila  
Quirce, Susana  
Belmonte, Carlos
Gallar, Juana  
Acosta Boj, María Carmen
Meseguer, Victor
Editor :
IOVS
Departamento:
Departamentos de la UMH::Fisiología
Fecha de publicación:
2021-01
URI :
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/38116
Resumen :
Purpose: To test the effect of different sodium channel blockers on the electrical activity of corneal nociceptors in intact and surgically injured corneas. Methods: In anesthetized guinea pigs, a 4-mm diameter corneal flap was performed in one eye at a midstromal depth using a custom-made microkeratome. At different times after surgery (3 hours to 15 days), the electrical activity of corneal nociceptor fibers was recorded from ciliary nerve filaments in the superfused eye in vitro. Mechanical threshold was measured using calibrated von Frey hairs; chemical stimulation was performed applying 30-second CO2 gas pulses. The characteristics of the spontaneous and stimulus-evoked activity of corneal nociceptors recorded from intact and lesioned corneas, before and after treatment with the sodium channel blockers lidocaine, carbamazepine, and amitriptyline, were compared. Results: No spontaneous or stimulus-evoked impulse activity was detected inside the flap at any of the studied time points. However, both were recorded from mechanonociceptor and polymodal nociceptors fibers in the surrounding corneal tissue, being significantly higher (sensitization) 24 to 48 hours after surgery. In these fibers, none of the tested drugs affected mechanical threshold, but they significantly reduced the CO2 response of polymodal nociceptors of intact and injured corneas. Likewise, they diminished significantly the transient increase in spontaneous and stimulus-evoked activity of sensitized polymodal nociceptors. Conclusions: Na+ channel blockers decrease the excitability of intact and sensitized corneal nociceptor fibers, thus acting as potential tools to attenuate their abnormal activity, which underlies the spontaneous pain, hyperalgesia, and allodynia often accompanying surgical corneal lesions, as occurs after photorefractive surgery.
Palabras clave/Materias:
injured cornea
sodium channel blockers
polymodal nociceptors
Tipo de documento :
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Derechos de acceso:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
DOI :
10.1167/iovs.62.1.2
Publicado en:
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci . 2021 Jan 4;62(1):2
Aparece en las colecciones:
Artículos Fisiología



Creative Commons La licencia se describe como: Atribución-NonComercial-NoDerivada 4.0 Internacional.