
The hot plate is a widely used test to assess nociception. The effect of non-nociceptive factors (weight, sex, activity, habituation, and repeated testing) on hot-plate latency was examined. Comparison of body weight and hot-plate latency revealed a small but significant inverse correlation (light rats had longer latencies). Habituating rats to the test room for 1 hour prior to testing did not decrease hot-plate latency except for female rats tested on days 2 to 4. Hot-plate latency decreased with repeated daily testing, but this was not caused by a decrease in locomotor activity or learning to respond. Activity on the hot plate was consistent across all 4 trials, and prior exposure to a room-temperature plate caused a similar decrease in latency as rats tested repeatedly on the hot plate. Despite this decrease in baseline hot-plate latency, there was no difference in morphine antinociceptive potency. The present study shows that weight, habituation to the test room, and repeated testing can alter baseline hot-plate latency, but these effects are small and have relatively little impact on morphine antinociception.This manuscript shows that non-nociceptive factors such as body weight, habituation, and repeated testing can alter hot-plate latency, but these factors do not alter morphine potency. In sum, the hot-plate test is an easy to use and reliable method to assess supraspinally organized nociceptive responses.
Male, Pain Threshold, Hot Temperature, sex difference, Pain - physiopathology, 610, Pain, Pain Threshold - physiology, Hot Temperature - adverse effects, Motor Activity, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Reaction Time, Animals, Pain Threshold - drug effects, Biology, Reaction Time - physiology, hyperalgesia, Animal - physiology, Pain Measurement, Behavior, Behavior, Animal, Animal, 621, morphine, Pain - drug therapy, Rats, Disease Models, Animal, Motor Activity - physiology, Disease Models, Nonciception, Female, Sprague-Dawley, Pain Measurement - methods, Pain - psychology
Male, Pain Threshold, Hot Temperature, sex difference, Pain - physiopathology, 610, Pain, Pain Threshold - physiology, Hot Temperature - adverse effects, Motor Activity, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Reaction Time, Animals, Pain Threshold - drug effects, Biology, Reaction Time - physiology, hyperalgesia, Animal - physiology, Pain Measurement, Behavior, Behavior, Animal, Animal, 621, morphine, Pain - drug therapy, Rats, Disease Models, Animal, Motor Activity - physiology, Disease Models, Nonciception, Female, Sprague-Dawley, Pain Measurement - methods, Pain - psychology
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