Frontiers in Pain Research (May 2024)

Characterization of pain-related behaviors in a rat model of acute-to-chronic low back pain: single vs. multi-level disc injury

  • Mary F. Barbe,
  • Frank Liu Chen,
  • Regina H. Loomis,
  • Michele Y. Harris,
  • Brandon M. Kim,
  • Kevin Xie,
  • Brendan A. Hilliard,
  • Elizabeth R. McGonagle,
  • Taylor D. Bailey,
  • Ryan P. Gares,
  • Megan Van Der Bas,
  • Betsy A. Kalicharan,
  • Lewis Holt-Bright,
  • Laura S. Stone,
  • Paul W. Hodges,
  • David M. Klyne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpain.2024.1394017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionLow back pain is the most common type of chronic pain. We examined pain-related behaviors across 18 weeks in rats that received injury to one or two lumbar intervertebral discs (IVD) to determine if multi-level disc injuries enhance/prolong pain.MethodsTwenty-three Sprague-Dawley adult female rats were used: 8 received disc puncture (DP) of one lumbar IVD (L5/6, DP-1); 8 received DP of two lumbar IVDs (L4/5 & L5/6, DP-2); 8 underwent sham surgery.ResultsDP-2 rats showed local (low back) sensitivity to pressure at 6- and 12-weeks post-injury, and remote sensitivity to pressure (upper thighs) at 12- and 18-weeks and touch (hind paws) at 6, 12 and 18-weeks. DP-1 rats showed local and remote pressure sensitivity at 12-weeks only (and no tactile sensitivity), relative to Sham DP rats. Both DP groups showed reduced distance traveled during gait testing over multiple weeks, compared to pre-injury; only DP-2 rats showed reduced distance relative to Sham DP rats at 12-weeks. DP-2 rats displayed reduced positive interactions with a novel adult female rat at 3-weeks and hesitation and freezing during gait assays from 6-weeks onwards. At study end (18-weeks), radiological and histological analyses revealed reduced disc height and degeneration of punctured IVDs. Serum BDNF and TNFα levels were higher at 18-weeks in DP-2 rats, relative to Sham DP rats, and levels correlated positively with remote sensitivity in hind paws (tactile) and thighs (pressure).DiscussionThus, multi-level disc injuries resulted in earlier, prolonged and greater discomfort locally and remotely, than single-level disc injury. BDNF and TNFα may have contributing roles.

Keywords