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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 2001, 21(12):4460-4468
Capsaicin Responses in Heat-Sensitive and Heat-Insensitive
A-Fiber Nociceptors
Matthias
Ringkamp1,
Yuan B.
Peng1,
Gang
Wu1,
Timothy V.
Hartke1,
James N.
Campbell1, 2, and
Richard A.
Meyer1, 2
1 Department of Neurosurgery, School of Medicine, Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21287, and 2 Johns
Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Maryland 20723
The recently cloned vanilloid receptor (VR1) is postulated to
account for heat and capsaicin sensitivity in unmyelinated afferents. We sought to determine whether heat and capsaicin sensitivity also coexist in myelinated nociceptive afferents. Action potential (AP) activity was recorded from single A-fiber nociceptors that innervated the hairy skin in monkey. Before intradermal injection of
capsaicin (10 µg/10 µl) into the receptive field, nociceptors were
classified as heat-sensitive (threshold, 53°C, 1 sec) or heat-insensitive afferents and as mechanically sensitive (von Frey
threshold, <6 bar) or mechanically insensitive afferents. All
heat-sensitive afferents (n = 16) were insensitive
to mechanical stimuli but responded to the intradermal injection of
capsaicin (69 ± 7 APs in 10 min). Responsiveness to mechanical
stimuli, thermal stimuli, and capsaicin varied in their receptive
fields; the majority of receptive field sites (24 of 36) were
responsive to only one or two stimulus modalities, whereas only eight
sites responded to all three modalities. For most heat-insensitive
afferents, the activity induced by the capsaicin injection did not
exceed the activity induced by needle insertion alone. However, the
largest response to capsaicin (314 ± 98 APs in 10 min) was
observed for five afferents that were insensitive to heat as well as
mechanical stimuli and therefore may be classified as cutaneous
chemoreceptors. These results suggest that A-fiber nociceptors play a
role in the pain and hyperalgesia associated with capsaicin injection. Our finding that a subgroup of capsaicin-sensitive A-fiber nociceptors are insensitive to heat predicts the existence of heat-insensitive capsaicin receptors.
Key words:
capsaicin; myelinated nociceptors; heat sensitivity; primate; monkey; hairy skin; receptive field; mechanically insensitive
afferents
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21124460-09$05.00/0
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