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Featured researches published by N. Machado.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2014

Cortex glial cells activation, associated with lowered mechanical thresholds and motor dysfunction, persists into adulthood after neonatal pain

Luciana Sayuri Sanada; Karina Laurenti Sato; N. Machado; E. Carmo; Kathleen A. Sluka; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan

We investigated if changes in glial activity in cortical areas that process nociceptive stimuli persisted in adult rats after neonatal injury. Neonatal pain was induced by repetitive needle prickling on the right paw, twice per day for 15 days starting at birth. Wistar rats received either neonatal pain or tactile stimulation and were tested behaviorally for mechanical withdrawal thresholds of the paws and gait alterations, after 15 (P15) or 180 (P180) days of life. Brains from rats on P15 and P180 were immunostained for glial markers (GFAP, MCP‐1, OX‐42) and the following cortical areas were analyzed for immunoreactivity density: prefrontal, anterior insular, anterior cingulated, somatosensory and motor cortices. Withdrawal thresholds of the stimulated paw remained decreased on P180 after neonatal pain when compared to controls. Neonatal pain animals showed increased density for both GFAP and MCP‐1 staining, but not for OX‐42, in all investigated cortical areas on both experimental times (P15 and P180). Painful stimuli in the neonatal period produced pain behaviors immediately after injury that persisted in adult life, and was accompanied by increase in the glial markers density in cortical areas that process and interpret pain. Thus, long‐lasting changes in cortical glial activity could be, at least in part, responsible for the persistent hyperalgesia in adult rats that suffered from neonatal pain.


Pain Medicine | 2016

Does Pain in the Neonatal Period Influence Motor and Sensory Functions in a Similar Way for Males and Females During Post-Natal Development in Rats?

E. Carmo; Luciana Sayuri Sanada; N. Machado; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan

OBJECTIVE : Early pain experiences can lead to disruption in the long-term responses to pain and in abnormal development and behavior in rodents. We evaluated the sensory and motor development of Wistar rats after exposure to painful stimulation (repetitive needle prickling) immediately after birth. METHODS : Male and female rats were followed up to 6 months of life, and sensory and motor functions were investigated by testing paw withdrawal with von Frey filaments, calibrated forceps (CF), and grip strength (GS) tests. RESULTS : Body weight increased with age and tended to be smaller in pain groups compared with their controls of the same sex. GS values also increased with age in controls but were stable and even decreased in pain groups from 120 up to 180 days. The von Frey filaments test showed higher values on the nonstimulated paws in male and female pain groups, with no differences between sides on the controls. The CF test showed smaller values on the stimulated paws in the pain group, with no differences between sides on the controls. CONCLUSIONS : Pain in the neonatal period influences sensory and motor functions negatively during development in male and female rats, even long term after the painful stimulus is ceased. The neonatal injury-induced hypersensitivity is persistent, and male and female rats respond similarly to the stimulus.


The FASEB Journal | 2015

An Immunohistochemistry Protocol to Identify Substance P Neurons

Ana Leda Bertoncini Simões; Carolina Carvalho; Luciana Sayuri Sanada; N. Machado; E. Carmo; Ida J. Llewellyn-Smith; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Immunohistochemical Protocol to Identify Glial Fibrillary Acid Protein (GFAP) in the Dorsal Horn of the Spinal Cord

Greice Anne Silva; Luciana Sayuri Sanada; N. Machado; E. Carmo; Alexandre Leite Rodrigues de Oliveira; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


The FASEB Journal | 2014

A quantitative analysis of skin collagen of Wistar rats submitted to painful procedures in the neonatal period (734.2)

E. Carmo; Raphaela Gonçalves; Luciana Sayuri Sanada; N. Machado; Izilda Violante; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


The Journal of Pain | 2013

Noxious stimuli in the neonatal period in rats can cause important peripheral nervous system alterations that persist on adults in a sex-dependent manner

Luciana Sayuri Sanada; K. Sato; E. Carmo; N. Machado; K. Sluka; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


F1000Research | 2013

Morphometric analysis of the gastrocnemius muscle in male and female Wistar rats submitted to painful stimulation in neonatal period

E. Carmo; N. Machado; Luciana Sayuri Sanada; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


The Journal of Pain | 2012

Immunoreactivity of astrocyte markers, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and macrophage chemoattractant protein (MCP-1), increases in after neonatal injury

Luciana Sayuri Sanada; K. Sluka; K. Sato; N. Machado; E. Carmo; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


The Journal of Pain | 2011

Assessment of somatosensory development in Wistar rats after pain stimulus during neonate period: gender and age differences

Luciana Sayuri Sanada; N. Machado; E. Carmo; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan


The Journal of Pain | 2011

Analysis of muscle strength and mechanical allodynia in Wistar rats after painful stimulation during neonatal period

E. Carmo; Luciana Sayuri Sanada; N. Machado; Valéria Paula Sassoli Fazan

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E. Carmo

University of São Paulo

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K. Sato

University of São Paulo

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K. Sluka

University of São Paulo

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