Behavioral evidence of thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia induced by intradermal cinnamaldehyde in rats

Merab G. Tsagareli, Nana Tsiklauri, Karen L. Zanotto, Mirela Iodi Carstens, Amanda H. Klein, Carolyn M. Sawyer, Gulnazi Gurtskaia, Elene Abzianidze, E. Carstens

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

48 Scopus citations

Abstract

TRPA1 agonists cinnamaldehyde (CA) and mustard oil (allyl isothiocyanate. =AITC) induce heat hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia in human skin, and sensitize responses of spinal and trigeminal dorsal horn neurons to noxious skin heating in rats. TRPA1 is also implicated in cold nociception. We presently used behavioral methods to investigate if CA affects sensitivity to thermal and mechanical stimuli in rats. Unilateral intraplantar injection of CA (5-20%) induced a significant, concentration-dependent reduction in latency for ipsilateral paw withdrawal from a noxious heat stimulus, peaking (61.7% of pre-injection baseline) by 30. min with partial recovery at 120. min. The highest dose of CA also significantly reduced the contralateral paw withdrawal latency. CA significantly reduced mechanical withdrawal thresholds of the injected paw that peaked sooner (3. min) and was more profound (44.4% of baseline), with no effect contralaterally. Bilateral intraplantar injections of CA resulted in a significant cold hyperalgesia (cold plate test) and a weak enhancement of innocuous cold avoidance (thermal preference test). The data are consistent with roles for TRPA1 in thermal (hot and cold) hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)233-236
Number of pages4
JournalNeuroscience Letters
Volume473
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2010

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Funded by grants from the US Civilian Research and Development Foundation ( GEB1-2883-TB07 ) and the National Institutes of Health ( DE013685 ). The authors thank Susan Cheung, Cindy Kwok, and Margaret Ivanov for their technical assistance.

Keywords

  • Cinnamaldehyde
  • Cold hyperalgesia
  • Heat hyperalgesia
  • Mechanical allodynia
  • Nociception
  • TRPA1

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