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Nociceptor spontaneous activity is responsible for fragmenting non–rapid eye movement sleep in mouse models of neuropathic pain

C Alexandre, Giulia Miracca, Victor A.D. Holanda, Ashley Sharma, Kamila Kourbanova, Ashley N. Ferreira, Maíra A. Bicca, Xiangsunze Zeng, Victoria A. Nassar, Seungkyu Lee, Satvinder Kaur, Sridevi V. Sarma, Pierre Sacré, Thomas E. Scammell, Clifford J. Woolf, Alban Latrémolière

2024Science Translational Medicine23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Spontaneous pain, a major complaint of patients with neuropathic pain, has eluded study because there is no reliable marker in either preclinical models or clinical studies. Here, we performed a comprehensive electroencephalogram/electromyogram analysis of sleep in several mouse models of chronic pain: neuropathic (spared nerve injury and chronic constriction injury), inflammatory (Freund’s complete adjuvant and carrageenan, plantar incision) and chemical pain (capsaicin). We find that peripheral axonal injury drives fragmentation of sleep by increasing brief arousals from non–rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS) without changing total sleep amount. In contrast to neuropathic pain, inflammatory or chemical pain did not increase brief arousals. NREMS fragmentation was reduced by the analgesics gabapentin and carbamazepine, and it resolved when pain sensitivity returned to normal in a transient neuropathic pain model (sciatic nerve crush). Genetic silencing of peripheral sensory neurons or ablation of CGRP + neurons in the parabrachial nucleus prevented sleep fragmentation, whereas pharmacological blockade of skin sensory fibers was ineffective, indicating that the neural activity driving the arousals originates ectopically in primary nociceptor neurons and is relayed through the lateral parabrachial nucleus. These findings identify NREMS fragmentation by brief arousals as an effective proxy to measure spontaneous neuropathic pain in mice.

Topics & Concepts

Neuropathic painMedicineAnesthesiaChronic painNociceptorNeuroscienceNociceptionNerve injuryInternal medicinePsychologyPsychiatryReceptorPain Mechanisms and TreatmentsSleep and Wakefulness ResearchNeuropeptides and Animal Physiology
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