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Prophylactic electroacupuncture on the upper cervical segments decreases neuronal discharges of the trigeminocervical complex in migraine-affected rats: An in vivo extracellular electrophysiological experiment

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 11:39 authored by Zhengyang Qu, Lu Liu, Luopeng Zhao, Shui Qing Zhang
Purpose: This rat experiment aims to demonstrate the efficacy of electrical acupuncture in preventing migraine attacks by stimulating the acupoint GB20. Introduction: Migraine, which takes 2ed at level four causes of GBD’s disease hierarchy, becomes a public health issue. It is important for physicians to supplement their knowledge of its treatment and consider alternative methods of therapy, such as acupuncture. However, the neurobiological and pathophysiological mechanisms of this prophylactic effect were unclear. The trigeminocervical complex is thought to be an important relay station in migraine pathophysiology as the key nuclei of the trigeminovascular system and the brain-stem descending pain modulation system. Methods: There were six groups involved in this study: control, model, electroacupuncture, non-acupoint electroacupuncture, saline+electroacupuncture and saline+non-acupoint electroacupuncture. We injected saline or inflammatory soup into dura mater to induce control or migraine in the rats. The mechanical pain threshold and the single-cell extra-neural neurophysiology of the C1 spinal dorsal horn neurons in the trigeminocervical complex were detected. Results: Pre-electroacupuncture could significantly increase the mechanical pain threshold of the periorbital region receptive field of the trigeminal nerve and decrease the discharges of neurons in the trigeminocervical complex. Acupuncture also reversed the abnormal skin pain response of the periorbital region receptive field of the trigeminal nerve caused by low-intensity stimulation. Discussion: We believe that our study makes a significant contribution to the literature because it is the first of its kind to use GB20 to provide relief from migraine attacks and mechanical cephalic cutaneous hypersensitivity by regulating the neuronal discharge from trigeminocervical complex.

History

Journal

Journal of Pain Research

Volume

13

Start page

25

End page

37

Total pages

13

Publisher

Dove Medical Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 Qu et al. This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License

Former Identifier

2006097412

Esploro creation date

2020-09-08

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