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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 1, 2002, 22(17):7746-7753
Degeneration of Myelinated Efferent Fibers Induces Spontaneous
Activity in Uninjured C-Fiber Afferents
Gang
Wu1,
Matthias
Ringkamp1,
Beth B.
Murinson2,
Esther M.
Pogatzki1,
Timothy V.
Hartke1,
Himali M.
Weerahandi1,
James N.
Campbell1, 4,
John W.
Griffin2, 3, and
Richard A.
Meyer1, 4
Departments of 1 Neurosurgery, 2 Neurology,
and 3 Neuroscience, and the 4 Applied Physics
Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21287
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ABSTRACT |
We demonstrated recently that uninjured C-fiber nociceptors in the
L4 spinal nerve develop spontaneous activity after transection of the
L5 spinal nerve. We postulated that Wallerian degeneration leads to an
alteration in the properties of the neighboring, uninjured afferents
from adjacent spinal nerves. To explore the role of degeneration of
myelinated versus unmyelinated fibers, we investigated the effects of
an L5 ventral rhizotomy in rat. This lesion leads to degeneration
predominantly in myelinated fibers. Mechanical paw-withdrawal
thresholds were assessed with von Frey hairs, and teased-fiber
techniques were used to record from single C-fiber afferents in the L4
spinal nerve. Behavioral and electrophysiological data were collected
in a blinded manner. Seven days after surgery, a marked decrease in
withdrawal thresholds was observed after the ventral rhizotomy but not
after the sham operation. Single fiber recordings revealed
low-frequency spontaneous activity in 25% of the C-fiber afferents
8-10 d after the lesion compared with only 11% after sham operation.
Paw-withdrawal thresholds were inversely correlated with the incidence
of spontaneous activity in high-threshold C-fiber
afferents. In normal animals, low-frequency electrocutaneous
stimulation at C-fiber, but not A-fiber, strength produced behavioral
signs of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia on the paw. These results
suggest that degeneration in myelinated efferent fibers is
sufficient to induce spontaneous activity in C-fiber afferents and
behavioral signs of mechanical hyperalgesia. Ectopic spontaneous
activity from injured afferents was not required for the development of
the neuropathic pain behavior. These results provide additional
evidence for a role of Wallerian degeneration in neuropathic pain.
Key words:
neuropathic pain; nerve injury; sensitization; hyperalgesia; neuropathy; Wallerian degeneration; unmyelinated
cutaneous afferent; in vivo; single nerve fiber
recording
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INTRODUCTION |
Pain is a devastating outcome
associated with certain neuropathies and traumatic nerve injuries. A
number of animal models have been developed to investigate the
mechanisms of neuropathic pain (Bennett and Xie, 1988 ; Seltzer et al.,
1990 ; Kim and Chung, 1992 ; Song et al., 1999 ). Historically,
much attention has been paid to the alterations that occur in the
injured neuron. Many studies have demonstrated that ectopic spontaneous
activity and mechanosensitivity occur at the nerve injury site and the
dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of injured neurons (Blumberg and Jänig,
1984 ; Meyer et al., 1985 ; Koschorke et al., 1991 ; Proske et al., 1995 ; Liu et al., 2000 ). In addition, the expression of molecules related to
nociception changes in injured primary afferents (Noguchi et al., 1995 ;
Fukuoka et al., 1998 ; Black et al., 1999 ; Boucher et al., 2000 ).
However, mounting evidence suggests that important changes also occur
in adjacent, uninjured neurons (Gold, 2000 ). The failure of an L5
dorsal rhizotomy to prevent or reverse the hyperalgesia associated with
an L5 spinal nerve ligation indicates that events outside of the
injured root play a role (Li et al., 2000 ). Indeed, unmyelinated,
nociceptive afferents from adjacent, uninjured nerve roots develop
spontaneous activity within 1 d of an L5 spinal nerve injury (Wu
et al., 2001 ). In addition, the cutaneous terminals of uninjured
nociceptors become responsive to adrenergic agents (Sato and Perl,
1991 ; Ali et al., 1999 ) and sensitized to mechanical and heat stimuli
(Shim et al., 2001 ). Also, various molecules associated with
nociception are upregulated in the L4 DRG after an L5 spinal nerve
injury (Fukuoka et al., 1998 , 2000a ,b ; Porreca et al., 1999 ; Boucher et
al., 2000 ; Xie et al., 2000 ; Hudson et al., 2001 ; Kim et al.,
2001 ).
One possible explanation for these observations is that Wallerian
degeneration of the injured fibers in the peripheral nerve leads to
changes in adjacent, uninjured fibers. Indeed, several authors have
reported previously a role for Wallerian degeneration in neuropathic
pain (Myers et al., 1996 ; Ramer et al., 1997 ; Sommer and
Schäfers, 1998 ). A spinal nerve lesion produces peripheral degeneration in motor as well as sensory nerve fibers and therefore does not allow an evaluation of the relative role of degeneration in
these different classes of nerve fibers. Recently, several groups have
shown that a selective lesion to motor fibers in the L5 spinal nerve
produces behavioral signs of hyperalgesia (Li et al., 2002 ; Sheth et
al., 2002 ). In the present study, we therefore sought to determine
whether degeneration in motor fibers also leads to the development of
spontaneous activity in unmyelinated, uninjured afferents.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Experimental animals. Twenty-four male Sprague Dawley
rats weighing 200-300 gm were studied. Two to four animals were placed in plastic cages with sawdust bedding and housed in a climate controlled room under a 14/10 hr light/dark cycle. The Johns Hopkins University Animal Care and Use Committee approved the experimental protocol.
Surgical procedures for producing the neuropathic pain
model. Fourteen animals were randomly assigned to two different
surgical groups, ventral rhizotomy or sham. Anesthesia was initiated
with pentobarbital (50 mg/kg, i.p.) and maintained with supplemental doses as needed. Animals were given a prophylactic dose of antibiotics to prevent infections (Bicillin, 100,000 U/kg, i.m.; Wyeth
Laboratories, Philadelphia, PA). After a midline skin incision
in the lumbar region, the L5 lamina was freed of its muscular
attachments, and an L5 hemilaminectomy was performed under an operating
microscope. The base of the transverse process of the L5 vertebra was
partially removed to obtain a good exposure of the L5 ventral root. The dura and arachnoid were incised, and the L5 ventral root was identified as it lies just beneath the dorsal root. The ventral root was transected 3-4 mm rostral to the L5 DRG, and ~1 mm of the root was
removed. Great effort was taken to avoid any damage to the L5 dorsal
roots and its DRG. The L5 DRG was not exposed during the
hemilaminectomy. For the sham-operated animals, the dura and arachnoid
were incised, and the ventral root was exposed but not cut.
Two animals were prepared in a given surgical session, one sham and one
lesioned. In subsequent behavioral and electrophysiological experiments, the experimenters were blinded as to which animal was
being tested to prevent bias. The experimenter performing the
behavioral assay was not informed about the ongoing protocol and
therefore did not know the type of lesion. Furthermore, this experimenter was not involved in the electrophysiological experiments. In the electrophysiological experiments, the person who anesthetized and prepared the animals for the electrophysiological recordings was
not involved in collecting data. Because both the sham-operated and
lesioned animals had similar operative procedures, the scar tissue that
was observable at the time of recording was not different and could not
be used as a cue by the experimenters performing the
electrophysiological recordings. In addition, no obvious wasting of
muscles was apparent. At the end of the experiments on each pair of
animals, an autopsy was conducted to confirm that the appropriate
lesion was performed.
Behavioral testing with mechanical stimuli. The rats were
tested two times preoperatively and at 4 and 7 d postoperatively. Testing was performed at approximately the same time during the day.
To quantify mechanical sensitivity of the foot, paw-withdrawal
threshold was measured using the up-down testing paradigm (Dixon, 1980 ; Chaplan et al., 1994 ) with a series of von Frey probes (3.2, 5.2, 8.3, 15, 29, 44, 64, 94, and 160 mN). Two rats (one sham-operated and
one lesioned animal) were placed under separate transparent Plexiglas
chambers positioned on a wire mesh floor. Five minutes were allotted
for habituation. Each stimulus consisted of a 2-3 sec application of
the von Frey probe to the middle of the plantar surface of the foot
with a 1-2 min interval between stimuli. Quick withdrawal or licking
of the paw in response to the stimulus was considered a positive
response. Threshold values were derived according to the method
described by Chaplan et al. (1994) . If the animal showed no response to
the von Frey probes, a value of 260 mN was assigned to threshold
(Ringkamp et al., 1999 ).
Electrophysiological procedures. Electrophysiological
recordings were performed 8-10 d after surgery. The rats were
initially anesthetized with pentobarbital (50 mg/kg, i.p.). The jugular vein was cannulated for subsequent intravenous administration of
pentobarbital (8-15 mg · kg 1 ·
hr 1) to maintain anesthesia. Heart rate was
continuously monitored by an electrocardiogram and used as an indicator
of adequate anesthesia. A tracheotomy was performed, and animals were
artificially ventilated with a mixture (1:3) of oxygen and room air to
maintain expired pCO2 at 40 mmHg. Muscle
relaxation was induced by an intravenous dose of pancuronium bromide (1 mg/kg) and maintained by supplemental doses hourly. Animal core
temperature was measured by a rectal probe and maintained at 37-38°C
using feedback-controlled, water-perfused heating pads.
Electrophysiological recordings were made from the L4 spinal nerve
(Fig. 1A). Teased-fiber
recording techniques were used as described previously (Campbell and
Meyer, 1983 ). Briefly, the L4 spinal nerve was carefully exposed. Small
bundles were cut from the L4 spinal nerve and teased into small
filaments suitable for recording activity from single nerve fibers. The
neural signal was differentially amplified, filtered, and digitized at
a rate of 25 kHz. A real-time computer-based data acquisition and
processing system (DAPSYS; Brian Turnquist, Johns Hopkins University)
provided multiple window discriminators for real-time sorting of
different action potential (AP) waveforms (for details, go to
http://www.dapsys.net). In addition, all waveforms passing a selectable
threshold level were saved for post hoc analysis.

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Figure 1.
Spontaneous activity in two typical C-fiber
afferents recorded 8 d after an L5 ventral rhizotomy.
A, Teased-fiber techniques were used to record activity
from single nerve fibers of the L4 spinal nerve
(R) in sham-operated animals and in animals after
transection of the L5 ventral root (T).
Electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve (S)
was used to identify and count the number of C-fibers at the recording
electrode. B, The presence of spontaneous action
potential activity was assessed over a 5 min recording interval. In
this example, two C-fibers with low-grade spontaneous activity were
recorded simultaneously. On the left, each
panel represents the spontaneous activity of one fiber,
and each vertical line corresponds to the time of
occurrence of an action potential. The action potential waveforms are
illustrated on the right. C,
Suprathreshold electrical stimulation at the sciatic nerve produced
three discrete action potential waveforms at C-fiber latencies. The
action potential waveform starting at 21 msec (peak at 22 msec) had the
same shape as the spontaneously active fiber 1, providing evidence that
the spontaneous activity came from this C-fiber. The two other C-fibers
had superimposed waveforms (from 26 to 32 msec). Fiber 2 corresponds to
one of these C-fibers.
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The sciatic nerve was exposed, and a stimulating electrode was placed
under the nerve, ~2 cm distal to the recording electrode. The number
of C-fiber waveforms observed at the recording electrode was determined
in response to electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve (one pulse
every 4 sec). The stimulus strength was gradually increased, and each
new C-fiber waveform was counted. These numbers were used to estimate
the proportion of spontaneously active C-fibers. Spontaneous activity
was recorded for at least 5 min.
Great care was taken to ensure positive identification of spontaneously
active C-fibers and to avoid incorrect classification of artifacts.
Only filaments with a good signal-to-noise ratio (>4:1) were used. In
addition, the bundles were finely dissected to keep the number of
C-fibers in the filaments low (median, three; range, one to six
C-fibers per filament). For many of the spontaneously active C-fibers
(Fig. 1, fiber 1), the action potential waveform matched one
of the waveforms elicited by electrical stimulation. However, a match
was not always possible when the electrically evoked waveform of the
spontaneously active fiber overlapped with the waveform of another
C-fiber (Fig. 1, fiber 2).
Ongoing activity in A-fibers, consisting mainly of muscle afferents,
was frequently observed from both normal and lesioned animals. The
ongoing A-fiber activity was usually at a fairly high frequency. This
prohibited an accurate C-fiber conduction velocity survey
attributable to interference between spontaneous A-fiber
waveforms and electrically evoked C-fiber waveforms. Therefore, the
analysis of the incidence of C-fiber spontaneous activity was
restricted to those filaments in which A-fiber spontaneous activity was
absent or present at a very low frequency.
In an attempt to sample throughout the L4 spinal nerve,
only two filaments were recorded from any bundle that was dissected from the nerve. After two filaments were recorded, a new bundle was
taken from the nerve trunk. By visual estimation, each bundle represented <5% of the nerve, and each filament represented <5% of
a bundle. By the end of the recording session, at least half of the
nerve was studied.
As a result of these stringent criteria for choosing filaments for
recording, <50% of the filaments were actually studied. However, in
our typical recording sessions, we were able to record from an average
of 11 filaments for each animal (range, 6-16 filaments). Because all
experiments were blinded, the criteria were the same for lesioned and
sham-operated animals.
Histological techniques. Animals were killed by cardiac
puncture under deep anesthesia and subsequently perfused with buffered saline and fixative. Fixation was for a total of 24 hr with 4% paraformaldehyde and 3% glutaraldehyde in Sorenson's buffered saline.
Preparation of tissues for light and electron microscopy (EM) was
performed, including washing with buffer, osmium fixation (1%
OsO4 for 45 min at room temperature),
dehydration, and standard plastic embedding. For light microscopy,
1-µm-thick sections were stained with Toluidine blue. Light
microscope images were photomicrographed using a Nikon (Tokyo, Japan)
Fujix HC 300Zi digital camera. For EM, silver thin sections of ~80 nm
thickness were stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Tissues
suspended on Formvar-coated (Electron Microscopy Sciences, Fort
Washington, PA) gold grids were viewed and photomicrographed using a
Hitachi (Tokyo, Japan) 600A electron microscope.
Electrocutaneous stimulation experiments. As will be
presented in Results, low-frequency spontaneous activity was evident in
L4 C-fibers recorded from lesioned rats. To assess whether low-frequency activity in C-fiber afferents could lead to behavioral signs of hyperalgesia, we electrically stimulated the heel of eight
naive rats and tested for mechanical responsiveness to von Frey probes.
A stimulating electrode (5 mm diameter with electroconducting gel) was
placed on the heel, and the return electrode (15 × 8 mm) was
placed on the dorsum of the same foot. Under isoflurane anesthesia
(2.0-2.5%), the foot was electrically stimulated (1 msec duration)
every 5 sec for 10 min (yielding 120 pulses) at either 50% above the
threshold current to achieve muscle twitching (A-fiber stimulation,
0.63 ± 0.08 mA) or at 100 mA (C-fiber stimulation). The
anesthesia was stopped immediately at the end of the electrical stimulation, and the animals recovered within 5 min. The stimulated hindpaw (left vs right) and stimulus intensity were randomly selected. The incidence of paw withdrawal to five applications of two different von Frey filaments (75 and 150 mN) to an area between the footpads was
determined on both hind feet three times before electrical stimulation
and at various times after stimulation (for times, see Fig. 4). Each
animal was stimulated and tested again 4 d later. For the second
test, the opposite foot was stimulated, and the other intensity was
used. The experimenter collecting the behavioral data was blinded to
stimulation side and intensity.
Statistical analysis. We used parametric and nonparametric
analyses where appropriate. Because the von Frey threshold measurements are not normally distributed attributable to the ceiling effect associated with limiting the maximum force that can be used, data are
analyzed nonparametrically and presented as median [25%, 75% quartiles]. Wilcoxon matched pairs, Mann-Whitney U,
2, ANOVA, and paired t tests were used.
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RESULTS |
Combined behavioral and electrophysiological experiments were
performed on 14 animals, on seven animals after transection of the L5
ventral root, and on seven sham-operated controls. The presence of
spontaneous action potential activity in C-fibers was assessed over a 5 min recording interval. Fibers in which spontaneous activity was
stopped by gentle warming of the skin with a heat lamp were considered
to be cold fibers (Leem et al., 1993 ) and were excluded from this analysis.
Ventral rhizotomy induces Wallerian degeneration in some
myelinated axons
The ventral rhizotomy led to degeneration that was restricted to
axons arising from the ventral root (Fig.
2A). At 7 d after the ventral rhizotomy, a mixture of degenerating and intact axons was
observed along the entire length of the nerve distal to the axotomy,
extending from the L5 spinal nerve to the plantar nerves of the
hindpaw. Wallerian degeneration of myelinated axons occurred in close
proximity to C-fibers (Fig. 2B).

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Figure 2.
Histological confirmation of the ventral rhizotomy
lesion. A, Spinal roots at the level of the dorsal root
ganglion 7 d after ventral rhizotomy, demonstrating a selective
lesion of the ventral root axons. The ventral root on the
right (asterisk) shows ongoing Wallerian
degeneration. The dorsal root ganglion on the left shows
intermixed cells and axons of the DRG, with no evidence of injury or
fiber degeneration. Magnification, 100×. B, Left
lateral plantar nerve 7 d after ventral rhizotomy shows a mixture
of degenerating and intact myelinated axons. A myelinated axon
undergoing Wallerian degeneration (asterisk) is seen in
close proximity to the unmyelinated axons of C-fibers
(arrows), a small myelinated axon, and an intact large
myelinated axon (on the right). Magnification,
4500×.
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Ventral rhizotomy produces behavioral signs of hyperalgesia
Paw-withdrawal thresholds decreased significantly after the
ventral rhizotomy. Thresholds on the side ipsilateral to the L5 ventral
rhizotomy dropped from 260 [260, 260] mN before the lesion to 29 [21, 49] mN after the lesion (p 0.05;
Wilcoxon matched pairs) (Fig.
3A). These thresholds after
the lesion were also lower than the thresholds on the ipsilateral paw
of the sham-operated animals (260 [260, 260] mN; p 0.01; Mann-Whitney U test). No significant changes in
paw-withdrawal thresholds were observed in the contralateral foot of
the lesioned or sham-treated animals.

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Figure 3.
Ventral rhizotomy produces mechanical hyperalgesia
on the side ipsilateral to the lesion and spontaneous activity in
C-fibers. A, Mechanical withdrawal thresholds decreased
after the lesion but not after the sham surgery. Measurements were made
before (open bars) and 7 d after
(filled bars) the surgery (*p < 0.05; Wilcoxon matched pairs test). B, Incidence of
spontaneous activity in high-threshold C-fibers increases after the L5
ventral rhizotomy (***p < 0.001; 2
test). The proportion of low-threshold fibers with spontaneous activity
that responded to gentle brushing of the skin did not change with the
lesion. However, the proportion of high-threshold fibers with
spontaneous activity that did not respond to gentle brushing of the
skin significantly increased after the lesion. C,
Hyperalgesia is associated with a high incidence of spontaneous
activity. The paw-withdrawal threshold for each animal is plotted as a
function of the incidence of spontaneous activity in high-threshold
C-fiber afferents for that animal. Animals with low paw-withdrawal
thresholds had a higher incidence of spontaneous activity in
high-threshold C-fiber afferents. Open symbols
correspond to sham-operated animals, and filled symbols
correspond to lesioned animals. D, Distribution of
discharge frequencies for the high-threshold, C-fiber afferents. The
distribution for the lesioned animals (filled
bars) was similar to the distribution for the sham-operated
animals (open bars). Data are normalized by the total
number of spontaneously active, high-threshold afferents
(n = 36, lesioned; n = 13, sham). The experimenters were blinded to the type of surgery at the
time of the behavioral and electrophysiological measurements. Seven
sham-operated animals and seven lesioned animals were studied.
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Spontaneous activity develops in uninjured C-fibers of spinal
nerve L4
Low-grade spontaneous activity developed after the L5 ventral
rhizotomy. Examples of two spontaneously active C-fibers, recorded simultaneously from one filament, are shown in Figure
1B. These recordings were obtained 8 d after an
L5 ventral rhizotomy. Low-grade spontaneous activity was observed in
both fibers (5 APs/5 min for fiber 1 and 9 APs/5 min for fiber
2). Electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve demonstrated the
presence of three C-fibers on the recording electrode (Fig.
1C). One of these C-fibers had an action potential waveform
that matched the action potential waveform of fiber 1 (conduction
latency, 21 msec; conduction velocity, 1.05 m/sec). One of the other
two C-fibers corresponded to fiber 2; these two C-fibers had similar
conduction latencies, and their waveforms are superimposed in Figure
1C (conduction latency, 30 msec; conduction velocity, 0.77 m/sec). They could be identified as two units because their electrical
thresholds were different.
In the lesioned animals, 25% of the C-fibers (49 of 194) were
spontaneously active. This incidence of spontaneous activity after the
L5 ventral rhizotomy was lower than the incidence of spontaneous
activity after an L5 spinal nerve ligation-cut reported previously by
us (Wu et al., 2001 ) (46%; p < 0.001;
2 test on proportions). In
sham-operated animals, <11% of the C-fibers (25 of 231;
p < 0.001; 2 test
compared with lesioned animals) in the L4 spinal nerve were spontaneously active, which is comparable with the number reported previously (Wu et al., 2001 ) for normal, control animals (8.5%; p > 0.1; 2 test on proportions).
High-threshold afferents exhibit spontaneous activity
We did not use noxious stimuli to search for nociceptive
receptive fields to avoid sensitization of afferent terminals. However, a light brush was stroked across the skin to identify low-threshold, mechanoreceptive afferents. The proportion of low-threshold C-fibers in
the lesioned animals (11%; 22 of 194 fibers) was not significantly different from the proportion in the sham animals (15%; 35 of 231 fibers; p > 0.2; 2
test). In addition, the proportion of spontaneously active
low-threshold C-fiber afferents was similar in sham-operated animals
(5.2%) and lesioned animals (6.6%) (Fig. 3B).
The fibers without a response to light brushing are presumably
high-threshold nociceptive afferents. When the low-threshold fibers are
excluded from the analysis, the incidence of spontaneous activity in
the remaining high-threshold afferents is more than threefold greater
in the lesion animals (18.4%) compared with the sham animals (5.6%;
p < 0.001; 2 test on
proportions) (Fig. 3B).
The distribution of discharge frequencies observed in the spontaneously
active, high-threshold C-fiber afferents is shown in Figure
3D. The median discharge frequency in these C-fibers was low
in the lesioned animals (5.5 [2.5, 23.5] APs/5 min) and was not
significantly different from the sham-operated animals (6.0 [2.8,
35.5] APs/5 min; p > 0.1; Mann-Whitney U
test). The median discharge frequency in the high-threshold C-fiber
afferents also did not differ substantially from that seen in the
low-threshold afferents (3.0 [2.0, 8.0] APs/5 min; p > 0.1). Many of the high-threshold fibers exhibited an irregular or
bursting discharge with a peak instantaneous frequency of 0.69 [0.06,
5.77] APs/sec.
A C-fiber was considered to be spontaneously active if it exhibited one
action potential during the 5 min recording period. When a more
conservative criterion of five action potentials per 5 min recording
period is used, the proportion of high-threshold fibers with
spontaneous activity after a lesion (10.2%) was still significantly
greater than for sham-operated animals (3.0%; p < 0.01; 2 test on proportions).
Incidence of spontaneous activity is increased in animals with
hyperalgesic behavior
The paw-withdrawal thresholds were inversely correlated with the
incidence of spontaneous activity in high-threshold C-fiber afferents
(Fig. 3C) (R2 = 0.72;
p 0.01). In other words, the animals that exhibited a low mechanical withdrawal threshold had a higher incidence of spontaneous activity.
Spontaneous activity originating from receptive field of
cutaneous nociceptors
In two additional experiments not included in the incidence
analysis, we purposefully searched for the receptive field of spontaneously active C-fibers. The first C-fiber of the day was investigated in each case to avoid the possibility that the intense search stimulus needed to locate and characterize the receptive field
of nociceptors contributed to the initial spontaneous activity. Both
fibers had cutaneous receptive fields with a high threshold for
mechanical stimuli, and thus both would be considered to be nociceptors. In each fiber, the spontaneous activity was eliminated for
more than 1 hr by intradermal administration of lidocaine (1% in 50 µl) into the receptive field.
Low-frequency electrocutaneous stimulation produces behavioral
signs of hyperalgesia
In normal animals, electrical stimulation of the heel at C-fiber
strength resulted in a significant increase in the incidence of paw
withdrawal to the 75 and 150 mN von Frey probes applied ipsilateral to
the area between the footpads (Fig. 4).
The incidence of paw withdrawal remained elevated for 15 min. A
significant increase in the incidence of paw withdrawal was not
observed after stimulation at A-fiber strength. In addition, no
significant changes were observed in the contralateral foot for either
stimulation intensity. Thus, low-frequency (one pulse every 5 sec for
10 min) stimulation at C-fiber, but not A-fiber, strength is able to
produce behavioral signs of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia.

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Figure 4.
Low-frequency electrocutaneous stimulation at
C-fiber strength produces behavioral signs of hyperalgesia. The
incidence of paw withdrawal is plotted as a function of time.
Electrical stimulation (ES) of the heel (1 pulse every 5 sec for 10 min) was applied at C-fiber strength (filled
symbols) or at A-fiber strength (open symbols).
A, The response to the 150 mN von Frey probe increased
significantly immediately after the termination of the C-fiber
stimulation and remained high for 15 min. B, The
response to the 75 mN probe also increased significantly after the
C-fiber stimulation. There was no significant change in response after
the A-fiber stimulation. (* p 0.05 and
**p 0.01 with respect to average baseline
response; ANOVA, followed by paired t test)
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DISCUSSION |
This is the first study showing that spontaneous activity in
uninjured, C-fiber nociceptive afferents develops after a selective injury to efferent myelinated fibers induced by ventral rhizotomy. This
injury also induces hyperalgesic behavior. Thus, degeneration in
myelinated efferent fibers is sufficient to induce spontaneous activity
in C-fiber afferents and behavioral signs of mechanical hyperalgesia.
Furthermore, we show that low-frequency electrical stimulation of
C-fibers is able to induce mechanical hyperalgesia in naive rats. These
results provide additional evidence for a role of Wallerian
degeneration in neuropathic pain.
Ectopic activity in uninjured axons
The spontaneously active L4 afferents in this study were not
directly injured because the lesion was to L5 ventral root fibers. We
demonstrated previously that spontaneous activity also develops in
uninjured C-fiber afferents after a spinal nerve lesion in the rat (Wu
et al., 2001 ) and monkey (Ali et al., 1999 ). The incidence of
spontaneous activity after the L5 ventral rhizotomy (25%) performed in
the current study was lower than that observed previously after spinal
nerve injury (46%) (Wu et al., 2001 ). This could reflect that fewer
nerve fibers are destroyed by the ventral rhizotomy. Alternatively,
muscle nociceptors may be more affected by the injury. Muscle
nociceptors are likely underrepresented because they commingle
with muscle afferents and filaments containing high rates of ongoing
activity from muscle spindles could not be studied.
The magnitude of mechanical hyperalgesia after the ventral rhizotomy
was not substantially different from that observed after a spinal nerve
injury (Li et al., 2002 ; Sheth et al., 2002 ) despite the lower
incidence of spontaneous activity in L4 afferents. However, an L5
ventral rhizotomy may also result in spontaneous activity in L5 C-fiber
afferents. The incidence of spontaneous activity in L5 afferents would
likely be higher than that observed in L4 afferents because of the
closer proximity to axons of the injured L5 ventral root.
Alternatively, full-blown hyperalgesic behavior may develop once the
ongoing spontaneous activity exceeds a certain level, and thus higher
levels of spontaneous activity may not yield lower withdrawal thresholds.
Ectopic activity in injured axons
Many authors have demonstrated that an injury to a peripheral
nerve results in ectopic mechanical, thermal, and chemical sensitivity, as well as spontaneous activity in the injured afferents (Blumberg and
Jänig, 1984 ; Koschorke et al., 1991 ). Spontaneous activity may
develop in myelinated afferents originally innervating muscle and
joints (Proske et al., 1995 ; Michaelis et al., 2000 ) or in unmyelinated
afferents from cutaneous nerves (Blumberg and Jänig, 1984 ; Meyer
et al., 1985 ). Surprisingly, an injury to the L5 spinal nerve appears
to lead to spontaneous active only in A-fiber afferents (Boucher et
al., 2000 ; Liu et al., 2000 ). However, low-grade spontaneous activity
in C-fibers comparable with that reported here may have been missed
because of high-frequency discharge in A-fibers or considered
insignificant. Spontaneous activity in injured A-fibers is thought to
be involved in the development of neuropathic pain. However,
transection of the L5 dorsal root before or after an L5 spinal nerve
lesion did not abolish neuropathic pain (Eschenfelder et al., 2000 ; Li
et al., 2000 ). Thus, spontaneous activity from the injured spinal nerve
is not essential for producing neuropathic pain.
A ventral rhizotomy leads to peripheral degeneration in myelinated
efferent fibers. Although both myelinated and unmyelinated ventral root
afferents are thought to exist, their number in the L5 ventral root
appears to be quite small (< 4%) (Coggeshall et al., 1977 ; Zenker et
al., 1979 ; Nam et al., 1989 ). Thus, a ventral rhizotomy at the L5 level
can be considered a relatively selective injury to myelinated efferent
fibers. Therefore, our results provide additional evidence that ectopic
activity in injured afferents is not a requirement for the development
of neuropathic pain. One could argue that some afferents are injured as
part of the surgical preparation (e.g., dorsal cutaneous ramus).
However, the sham animals were subjected to the same surgical approach as the lesioned animals, and thus the difference between sham and
lesion cannot be explained in this way.
Does low-frequency activity in C-fibers produce hyperalgesia?
Previous investigations in acute models of central sensitization
suggest that selective activation of C-fiber afferents leads to central
sensitization (Woolf, 1992 ; Kilo et al., 1994 ; Koltzenburg et al.,
1994 ). In these experiments, high discharge rates are presumed. In
contrast, the C-fiber afferents in this study exhibited low rates of
spontaneous activity (median, ~1.0 AP/min). However, a relatively
large proportion of the uninjured, C-fiber afferents develops
spontaneous activity after a ventral rhizotomy and after a spinal nerve
lesion. Thus, low discharge rates may produce central sensitization
over time if a sufficient proportion of the C-fiber population is involved.
Low-frequency activity in C-fibers can produce an increase in
peripheral blood flow attributable to the release of vasoactive neurotransmitters from peripheral nociceptor terminals
(Lynn and Cotsell, 1992 ; Magerl and Treede, 1996 ). Thus, high-frequency activity in C-fibers is not required for a pharmacologically relevant release of neuropeptides in the periphery. A similar release of neurotransmitters-modulators from central terminals of C-fiber nociceptors in the dorsal horn could be sufficient for development of
central sensitization. This may be even more so under pathological conditions also affecting glial cells. Glial cells are known to modulate neuronal excitability (Carmignoto, 2000 ), and this function could be affected by peripheral injury. Spinal glial cells are known to
show reactions to injury of peripheral nerves or dorsal-ventral roots
(Colburn et al., 1999 ; Winkelstein et al., 2001 ).
We provide evidence that low-frequency (0.2 Hz) electrocutaneous
stimulation of the heel at C-fiber, but not A-fiber, strength is able
to produce behavioral signs of secondary hyperalgesia in the hindpaw of
naive rats. In human subjects, transcutaneous electrical stimulation at
high current densities is able to produce areas of secondary
hyperalgesia in the volar forearm when the stimulus frequency is 5 Hz
(Koppert et al., 2001 ). This group has shown recently (M. Schmelz, personal communication) that electrical stimulation
with interpulse intervals as long as 20 sec produces a zone of
secondary hyperalgesia within 10 min. These findings support the
hypothesis that low-frequency activity in C-fibers is able to produce
hyperalgesia to mechanical stimuli.
Do injuries to motor fibers lead to neuropathic pain
in humans?
Although the rats developed signs of neuropathic pain after the
ventral rhizotomy, it is not clear whether humans also suffer from
neuropathic pain after injuries to motor fibers. Pain is not a
principal complaint of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, but myalgesia is reported with polio. Whether these patients have hyperalgesia has not been carefully studied. In addition,
these diseases cause a gradual degeneration in ventral root fibers,
whereas ventral rhizotomy induces a simultaneous degeneration in all
fibers. Recently, we studied five patients after a surgical lesion of
the C7 spinal nerve. One of these patients developed neuropathic pain
that lasted for several months (Ali et al., 2002 ). Thus, a
"Chung-type" lesion in humans can produce neuropathic pain.
Wallerian degeneration hypothesis
We postulate that Wallerian degeneration in the peripheral nerve
may play an important role in at least some types of neuropathic pain.
To explain the neuropathic pain and spontaneous activity in uninjured
C-fiber afferents after a spinal nerve lesion, we proposed previously
that transection of the L5 spinal nerve produces a population of
partially denervated Remak bundles consisting of degenerating
unmyelinated axons from the L5 root and intact unmyelinated axons from
the L4 root (Wu et al., 2001 ). Schwann cells of such Remak bundles
would synthesize and release growth factors, cytokines, and
short-acting intermediates that could affect uninjured afferents
sharing the same Remak bundle. Although ventral rhizotomy induces
neuropathic pain behavior, it does not lead to partially denervated
Remak bundles (B. B. Murinson, personal communication).
Thus, neither partial denervation of Remak bundles nor degeneration of
cutaneous nerve fibers is a prerequisite for the development of
spontaneous activity in uninjured afferents and of neuropathic pain.
In the sciatic nerve, the efferent nerve fibers from the L5 ventral
root are in close proximity to afferent fibers from the L4 and L5
roots. Degenerating myelinated fibers in the plantar nerve were found
to be in close proximity to unmyelinated fibers (Fig. 2). Products
associated with degenerating myelinated fibers, reacting Schwann cells,
or infiltrating macrophages may diffuse to nearby sensory fibers and
alter their properties. For example, within 24 hr of a nerve section,
the expression of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor- (TNF ),
interleukin-1 (IL-1 ), IL-1 , and IL-6 increases in the
distal peripheral nerve (Shamash et al., 2002 ; Stoll et al., 2002 ).
Exogenous administration of TNF to the peripheral nerve produced
activity in C-fiber nociceptors (Sorkin et al., 1997 ); therefore,
TNF could be a culprit. A ventral rhizotomy has been reported to
enhance regeneration of uninjured sensory neurons (Rich and Johnson,
1985 ).
These results demonstrate that degeneration in myelinated fibers is
sufficient to induce spontaneous activity in C-fiber afferents and
behavioral signs of mechanical hyperalgesia. In these experiments, the
injured fibers were not part of the sensory system. Thus, ectopic
spontaneous activity from injured afferents is not required for the
development of neuropathic pain behavior. An understanding of the
mechanisms that lead to the development of spontaneous activity in
uninjured C fibers may result in novel strategies for the treatment of
neuropathic pain.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 18, 2001; revised June 10, 2002; accepted June 13, 2002.
This research was supported by the Johns Hopkins Blaustein Pain
Research Fund and National Institutes of Health Grants NS 41269 and NS
14447. We greatly appreciate the assistance of Dr. Yongbo Li.
Correspondence should be addressed to Richard Meyer, 5-109 Meyer
Building, Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine, 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287. E-mail:
rmeyer{at}jhmi.edu.
 |
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