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Original Research

Open Access

Bite Force Measurement in Awake Rats: A Behavioral Model for Persistent Orofacial Muscle Pain and Hyperalgesia

  • Jin Y. Ro1,*,

1Department of Biomedical Sciences, Program in Neuroscience, University of Maryland, Baltimore School of Dentistry Baltimore, Maryland

DOI: 10.11607/jofph.19159 Vol.19,Issue 2,June 2005 pp.159-167

Published: 30 June 2005

*Corresponding Author(s): Jin Y. Ro E-mail: jyr001@dental.umaryland.edu

Abstract

Aims: To test the hypotheses that masseteric inflammation pro-duces a reduction of mean bite force and success rates and that classical anti-inflammatory agents prevent inflammation-induced changes in bite force. Methods: Rats were initially trained to pro-duce a bite force greater than 400 g. Once the rats attained above 70% of successful responses in a 10-minute test period, the bite force required for reinforcement was increased gradually to the target force of 1.3 kg. Seven trained rats received bilateral masse-teric injections of complete Freund’s adjuvant (CFA; 50 µL in iso-tonic saline). The mean number of attempted bites, the percentage of correct responses, and the bite force measured before and 1, 2, 3, 7, 10, and 14 days following the CFA injection were compared. Five additional trained rats were injected with the same volume of vehicle control. Other rats (n = 10) were treated with anti-inflam-matory agents before and after the CFA injection. Results: Intramuscular CFA, but not the vehicle, produced a significant reduction of mean bite force and success rate at days 1, 2, and 3. Bite force and success rate gradually increased; they returned to baseline by 14 days. The CFA-mediated reduction of bite force and success rate was prevented in rats treated with anti-inflamma-tory agents administered intraperitoneally (dexamethasone, n = 5, or indomethacin, n = 5, 4 mg/kg). Conclusion: These results pro-vide further evidence that bite force measurements in awake rats can be a useful method for the study of inflammatory muscle hyperalgesia.

Keywords

bite force; masseter inflammation; rat behavior

Cite and Share

Jin Y. Ro. Bite Force Measurement in Awake Rats: A Behavioral Model for Persistent Orofacial Muscle Pain and Hyperalgesia. Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache. 2005. 19(2);159-167.

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