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Papers of the Week


Papers: 31 Aug 2019 - 6 Sep 2019


Animal Studies


2019 Oct 15


Neuroscience


418

Involvement of Spinal Cannabinoid CB Receptors in Exercise-Induced Antinociception.

Authors

Dos Santos R S, Sorgi C A, Peti A P F, Veras F P, Faccioli L H, Galdino G
Neuroscience. 2019 Oct 15; 418:177-188.
PMID: 31473278.

Abstract

Muscle pain affects approximately 11-24% of the global population. Several studies have shown that exercise is a non-pharmacological therapy to pain control. It has been suggested that the endocannabinoid system is involved in this antinociceptive effect. However, the participation of this pathway is unclear. The present study aimed to investigate whether spinal cannabinoid CB receptors participate in the exercise-induced antinociception. The inflammatory muscle pain model was induced by the intramuscular injection of carrageenan. Tactile allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia were determined with the von Frey filaments and hot-plate tests. C57BL/6 J female mice underwent a swimming training protocol that lasted 3 weeks. This protocol of exercise reduced carrageenan-induced tactile allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia and this effect was prevented by the cannabinoid CB receptors inverse agonist AM630 and potentiated by MAFP (inhibitor of the enzyme that metabolizes endocannabinoids) and minocycline (microglia inhibitor). In addition, exercise increased the endocannabinoid anandamide levels and cannabinoid CB receptors expression whereas it reduced Iba1 (microglial marker) protein expression as well as pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and IL-1β) in the spinal cord of mice with inflammatory muscle pain. Swimming training also reduced muscle temperature of carrageen-treated animals. The present study suggests that activation of spinal cannabinoid CB receptors and reduction of activated microglia are involved in exercise-induced antinociception.