Electroacupuncture attenuates nociceptive behaviors in a mouse model of cancer pain

Author:

Zhao Yu-Xue1ORCID,Yao Ming-Jiang123,Shen Jian-Wu14,Zhang Wen-Xi1,Zhou Yuan-Xi1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Acupuncture and Moxibustion, China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences , Beijing, China

2. Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Xiyuan Hospital of China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, China

3. Key Laboratory of Pharmacology of Chinese Materia Medica, Beijing, China

4. Urology Department of Xiyuan Hospital, Xiyuan Hospital of China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, China

Abstract

Pain is a major symptom in cancer patients, and cancer-induced bone pain (CIBP) is the most common type of moderate and severe cancer-related pain. The current available analgesic treatments for CIBP have adverse effects as well as limited therapeutic effects. Acupuncture is proved effective in pain management as a safe alternative therapy. We evaluated the analgesic effect of acupuncture in treatment of cancer pain and try to explore the underlying analgesic mechanisms. Nude mice were inoculated with cancer cells into the left distal femur to establish cancer pain model. Electroacupuncture (EA) treatment was applied for the xenograft animals. Pain behaviors of mice were evaluated, followed by the detections of neuropeptide-related and inflammation-related indicators in peripheral and central levels. EA treatment alleviated cancer-induced pain behaviors covering mechanical allodynia, thermal hyperalgesia and spontaneous pain, and also down-regulated immunofluorescence expressions of neuropeptide CGRP and p75 in the skin of affected plantar area in xenograft mice, and inhibited expressions of overexpressed neuropeptide-related and inflammation-related protein in the lumbar spinal cord of xenograft mice. Overall, our findings suggest that EA treatment ameliorated cancer-induced pain behaviors in the mouse xenograft model of cancer pain, possibly through inhibiting the expressions of neuropeptide-related and inflammation-related protein in central level following tumor cell xenografts.

Funder

Chinese Government Scholarship

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central public welfare research institutes

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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