- Prophylactic L-arginine and ibuprofen delay the development of tactile allodynia and suppress spinal miR-155 in a rat model of diabetic neuropathy.
Prophylactic L-arginine and ibuprofen delay the development of tactile allodynia and suppress spinal miR-155 in a rat model of diabetic neuropathy.
Diabetic neuropathy (DN) is a common complication of diabetes mellitus that is hardly reversible at the late stages. Since treatment of neuropathic pain is predominantly symptomatic, a prophylactic measure would be useful. Both ibuprofen and L-arginine exert antiallodynic effects on chronic constriction injury (CCI)-induced cold allodynia. Furthermore, ibuprofen is effective in CCI-induced mechanical allodynia. The aim of the study was to assess the antiallodynic effect of prophylactic ibuprofen and L-arginine in streptozotocin-induced DN in rats and to further investigate the role of spinal miR-155 and nitric oxide (NO) in this effect. Tactile allodynia was assessed weekly by von Frey filaments. Oral daily administration of ibuprofen, L-arginine and their combination, for 4 weeks starting 1 week after streptozotocin injection (ie, before the development of tactile allodynia), resulted in a significant decrease of tactile allodynia compared with the control diabetic group. This was evident in the fifth week of the experiment. The 3 treatments prevented the decrease in muscle fiber diameter and epidermal thickness, seen in the control diabetic group. Furthermore, ibuprofen, L-arginine and their combination prevented the increase in the spinal NO level and miRNA-155, seen in the control diabetic group. In conclusion, both ibuprofen and L-arginine delayed the development of behavioral and histologic changes of DN, with concomitant suppression of spinal miR-155 and NO level. L-arginine being tolerable may be useful prophylactically in diabetic patients.