J Korean Pain Soc.  2000 Nov;13(2):149-155.

The Analgesic Effect and Its Neuropathologic Changes of Pulsed Radiofrequency Lesions in the Sciatic Nerve of the Rat

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anesthesiology, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Kangwon, Korea.
  • 2Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Kangwon, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pulsed radiofrequency (RF) lesioning is a painless procedure and causes no neurodestruction and neuritis-like reaction are common following conventional RF lesioning. There is little data about the effect of pulsed RF especially with regard to its suitability for the treatment of acute pain. The possibility of a placebo effect cannot be ruled out because a double-blind study was not performed in previous studies. There is also no neuropathologic study about pulsed RF.
METHODS
The rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (40 mg/kg, i.p.; supplemented as necessary). The common sciatic nerve was exposed by blunt dissection through biceps femoris. Pulsed RF was administered to the common sciatic nerve using a 30 ms/s pulse with for 120 seconds. The temperature reached was no more than 42o P>C. Analgesia was determined using hot-plate assay shortly and, 3 days and 1 week before, and 2 weeks after operation. Lesions were examined with LM (light microscope) and EM (electron microscope) 2 weeks later.
RESULTS
There were no differences in response latencies between the control and experimental group. There were many vacuoles with hyaline bodies in the Schwann cell cytoplasm rather than axon in LM and larger electron dense bodies. No changes were found in the axon or unmyelinated fibers. Only small changes were found in the sheaths of myelinated fibers and Schwann cells.
CONCLUSIONS
We therefore do think that any analgesic effect of pulsed RF is not a result of block of neural conduction. But rather than it can be attributed to others factors. It was also ineffective as a treatment for acute pain such as that caused by the hot-plate test.

Keyword

Pain acute; Research hot-plate test; neuropathologic changes; Surgery pulsed radiofrequency lesion

MeSH Terms

Acute Pain
Analgesia
Animals
Axons
Cytoplasm
Double-Blind Method
Hyalin
Myelin Sheath
Neural Conduction
Pentobarbital
Placebo Effect
Rats*
Reaction Time
Schwann Cells
Sciatic Nerve*
Sodium
Vacuoles
Pentobarbital
Sodium
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