Abstract
IntroductionProcedural pain in neonates is associated with impaired neurodevelopment. Whether hearing development is impaired, however, remains unknown. This study examined potential cause-and-effect relationship between neonatal pain and subsequent hearing loss in mice.MethodsMale C57BL/6J mouse pups received an intra-plantar injection of complete Freund’s adjuvant on postnatal day 7 or repetitive needle prick stimuli from postnatal days 0–7. Mechanical and thermal pain thresholds were tested between postnatal days 14 and 49. The auditory brainstem response test was used to determine hearing thresholds. The inner ear structures and dendritic morphology in auditory cortex were assessed using immunofluorescence and Golgi-staining. The effects of oxycodone, tropomyosin receptor kinase B agonists and antagonists were tested.ResultsNeonatal pain resulted in impaired hearing in adulthood of both pain models No damage or synapse loss was found in the cochlea but increased dendritic spine density and reduced brain-derived neurotrophic factor level were found in auditory cortex in neonatal pain group. Oxycodone attenuated hearing loss and the associated changes in dendritic spine density and brain-derived neurotrophic factor changes in auditory cortex. A tropomyosin receptor kinase B agonist reversed neonatal pain-induced hearing impairment and decreased caspase 3 expression in auditory cortex. Administration of tropomyosin receptor kinase B antagonist in naïve mouse pups impaired hearing development suppressed phosphorylated-AKT, and increased caspase 3 expression.ConclusionChronic pain during the neonatal period resulted in impaired hearing in adulthood in mice, possibly via the brain-derived neurotrophic factor signaling pathway and dendritic spine pruning deficiency in auditory cortex.
Funder
Medical Engineering Fund of Fudan University
Shenkang Clinical Study Foundation of Shanghai
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Shanghai Municipal Health and Family Planning Commission Research Project
Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai
Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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