Neuromodulatory effects of TRH upon swim and cholinergic analgesia

Pamela D. Butler, Richard J. Bodnar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

In addition to short-acting analgesic actions by itself and modulation of analgesic responses induced by endogenous opioids and neurotensin, central administration of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) potentiates footshock analgesia. The present study evaluated the effects of TRH upon the neurohormonally-mediated though nonopioid analgesia induced by swims in rats. Intracerebroventricular TRH (10 and 50 μg) dose-dependently potentiated swim (21, 15, 2°C baths) analgesia on the tail-flick test, an effect which was not due to the hypothermic or basal pain threshold changes. Intravenous (8 mg/kg) TRH potentiated swim (21°C) analgesia; the 600:1 difference in potency between routes strongly suggests central sites of neuromodulatory action. Intracerebroventricular diketopiperazine (50 μg), a TRH metabolite, and RX77368 (50 μg), a TRH analogue, also potentiated swim (21°C) analgesia, effects also independent of hypothermia and basal reactivity to pain. Finally, given the excitatory interaction between TRH and acetylcholine as well as the cholinergic involvement in swim analgesia, intracerebroventricular TRH potentiated pilocarpine (10 mg/kg, IP) analgesia.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)299-307
Number of pages9
JournalPeptides
Volume8
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1987
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cholinergic analgesia
  • Diketopiperazine
  • Hypothermia
  • Pain perception
  • RX77368
  • Rats
  • Stress
  • Swim analgesia
  • Thyrotropin-releasing hormone

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