Frontiers in Pain Research (Jan 2023)

Stress-induced changes in nociceptive responding post-surgery in preclinical rodent models

  • Ariadni Bella,
  • Ariadni Bella,
  • Ariadni Bella,
  • Alba M. Diego,
  • Alba M. Diego,
  • Alba M. Diego,
  • David P. Finn,
  • David P. Finn,
  • David P. Finn,
  • Michelle Roche,
  • Michelle Roche,
  • Michelle Roche

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpain.2022.1106143
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

Read online

Chronic post-surgical pain affects up to 85% of individuals depending on the type of surgery, the extent of inflammation, tissue and/or nerve damage. Pre-surgical stress is associated with greater pain intensity, prolonged recovery and is one of the main risk factors for the development of chronic post-surgical pain. Clinically valid animal models provide an important means of examining the mechanisms underlying the effects of stress on post-surgical pain and identifying potential novel therapeutic targets. This review discusses the current data from preclinical animal studies examining the effect of stress on post-surgical pain, the potential underlying mechanisms and gaps in the knowledge that require further investigation.

Keywords