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      Lack of Paclitaxel Effects on Intracranial Self-Stimulation in Male and Female Rats: Comparison to Mechanical Sensitivity

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          Abstract

          Paclitaxel is a cancer chemotherapy with adverse effects that include peripheral neuropathy, neuropathic pain, and depression of behavior and mood. In rodents, hypersensitive paw-withdrawal reflexes from mechanical stimuli serve as one common measure of paclitaxel-induced pain-related behavior. This study tested the hypothesis that paclitaxel would also depress rates of positively reinforced operant responding as a measure of pain-related behavioral depression. Male and female Sprague Dawley rats were equipped with electrodes targeting the medial forebrain bundle, trained to lever press for electrical brain stimulation in an assay of intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS), and treated with four injections of varying paclitaxel doses (0.67, 2.0, or 6.0 mg/kg/injection x 4 injections on alternate days). Mechanical sensitivity, body weight, and ICSS were evaluated before, during, and for three weeks after paclitaxel treatment. Paclitaxel doses sufficient to produce mechanical hypersensitivity did not reliably depress ICSS in male or female rats. Moreover, the degree of behavioral suppression in individual rats did not correlate with mechanical sensitivity. Paclitaxel treatment regimens commonly used to model chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain in rats are not sufficient to depress ICSS.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9013016
          20859
          Behav Pharmacol
          Behav Pharmacol
          Behavioural pharmacology
          0955-8810
          1473-5849
          5 January 2018
          April 2018
          01 April 2019
          : 29
          : 2-
          : 290-298
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Dept. of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23298
          [2 ]Dept. of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23298, USA
          Article
          PMC5854530 PMC5854530 5854530 nihpa932568
          10.1097/FBP.0000000000000378
          5854530
          29369054
          b4bad83a-1414-4974-8e5d-1eb98fc98f48
          History
          Categories
          Article

          pain,mechanical allodynia,motivation,neuropathy,functional impairment,Paclitaxel,rat,intracranial self-stimulation

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