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      Neonatal maternal separation alters stress-induced responses to viscerosomatic nociceptive stimuli in rat.

      American Journal of Physiology - Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology
      Animals, Animals, Newborn, Behavior, Animal, Colonic Diseases, Functional, physiopathology, Defecation, Disease Models, Animal, Eating, Female, Gastrointestinal Motility, physiology, Hyperalgesia, Male, Maternal Deprivation, Naloxone, pharmacology, Narcotic Antagonists, Nociceptors, drug effects, Pain Threshold, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Long-Evans, Stress, Psychological, Weight Gain

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          Abstract

          This study investigated the combined effect of neonatal maternal separation and acute psychological stress on pain responses in adult rats. Long-Evans dams and their male pups were reared under two conditions: 1) 180 min daily maternal separation (MS180) on postnatal days 2-14 or 2) no handling or separation (NH). At 2 mo of age, visceromotor responses to graded intensities of phasic colorectal distension (10-80 mmHg) at baseline as well as following acute 60 min water avoidance stress (WA) were significantly higher in MS180 rats. Both groups showed similar stress-induced visceral hyperalgesia in the presence of naloxone (20 mg/kg ip). MS180 rats had smaller stress-induced cutaneous analgesia in the tail-flick test compared with NH rats, with a residual naloxone-resistant component. MS180 rats showed an enhanced fecal pellet output following WA or exposure to a novel environment. These data suggest that early life events predispose adult Long-Evans rats to develop visceral hyperalgesia, reduced somatic analgesia, and increased colonic motility in response to an acute psychological stressor, mimicking the cardinal features of irritable bowel syndrome.

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