Author:
Hasegawa Shoichi,Yamashita Riko,Nakagawa Yusuke,Miyatake Kazumasa,Katagiri Hiroki,Nakamura Tomomasa,Koga Hideyuki,Sekiya Ichiro,Yoshii Toshitaka,Rosen Vicki,Tsuji Kunikazu
Abstract
AbstractThe pain assessment in animals is challenging as they cannot verbally express the site and severity of pain. In this study, we tried a small implantable actimeter, “Nanotag”, to monitor spontaneous locomotor activity and body temperature in animals suffering from a chemical-induced rat knee arthritis as compared to naïve and steroid-treated rats. Nanotag could detect the decrease in locomotor activity quickly after the arthritis induction and anti-inflammation analgesic treatment by intra-articular injection of steroid significantly improved locomotor activity. These changes were in the same line with those of a conventional knee pain evaluation method (incapacitance test). Nanotag can be utilized as the non-interventional, continuous, and completely objective monitoring the amount of pain in rat knee arthritis model. This traditional yet innovative method may be universally applicable to various pain models and species, making it a worthwhile device for research across diverse fields.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC