Localized Sympathectomy Reduces Mechanical Hypersensitivity by Restoring Normal Immune Homeostasis in Rat Models of Inflammatory Pain.
Wenrui XieSisi ChenJudith A StrongAi-Ling LiIan P LewkowichJun-Ming ZhangPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Sympathetic blockade is used for many pain conditions, but preclinical studies show both pro- and anti-nociceptive effects. The sympathetic nervous system also has both pro- and anti-inflammatory effects on immune tissues and cells. We examined effects of a very localized sympathectomy. By cutting the gray rami to the spinal nerves near the lumbar sensory ganglia, we avoided widespread sympathetic denervation. This procedure profoundly reduced mechanical pain behaviors induced by a back pain model and a model of peripheral inflammatory pain. One possible mechanism was reduction of inflammation in the sympathetically denervated regions. This raises the possibility that therapeutic interventions targeting gray rami might be useful in some inflammatory conditions.