Electrical Stimulation of the Anterior Cingulate Cortex Reduces Responses of Rat Dorsal Horn Neurons to Mechanical Stimuli

2005 
The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is involved in the affective and motivational aspect of pain perception. Behavioral studies show a decreased avoidance behavior to noxious stimuli without change in mechanical threshold after stimulation of the ACC. However, as part of the neural circuitry of behavioral reflexes, there is no evidence showing that ACC stimulation alters dorsal horn neuronal responses. We hypothesize that ACC stimulation has two phases: a short-term phase in which stimulation elicits antinociception and a long-term phase that follows stimulation to change the affective response to noxious input. To begin testing this hypothesis, the purpose of this study was to examine the response of spinal cord dorsal horn neurons during stimulation of the ACC. Fifty-eight wide dynamic range spinal cord dorsal horn neurons from adult Sprague-Dawley rats were recorded in response to graded mechanical stimuli (brush, pressure, and pinch) at their respective receptive fields, while simultaneous stepwise el...
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