Unravelling pain in Göttingen Minipigs undergoing experimentally induced closed-chest myocardial infarction: a prospective cohort study
Mariafrancesca Petrucci, Anne-Christine Uldry, Chiara Parodi, Luisana Gisela Garcia Casalta, Alain Despont, Noé Corpataux, Fabien Praz, Robert Rieben, Daniela Casoni

TL;DR
This study examines pain in pigs after heart attacks and finds that pain persists even after recovery.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate pain in pigs after experimentally induced heart attacks.
Findings
Acute pain requiring analgesia was observed in four minipigs after myocardial infarction.
Pain thresholds decreased significantly after the heart attack and remained low at the study endpoint.
No correlation was found between pain thresholds and biomarkers like troponin I.
Abstract
The pain associated with experimental myocardial infarction in pigs has never been investigated. We aimed at assessing pain and its correlation with myocardial damage. Twenty-four Göttingen minipigs undergoing closed chest myocardial infarction followed by coronary reperfusion under general balanced anaesthesia were included in the trial. Pain was assessed through mechanical and thermal thresholds, sensitivity to Von Frey filaments and behavioural indicators before (Pre MI), the day after (Post MI) and at the study endpoint (Post MI-endpoint). Over time differences in mechanical thresholds (MT) and thermal thresholds (TT) were assessed using one-sample t-test and their correlations with troponin I/cytokines using logistic regression. In four minipigs at Post MI acute pain requiring analgesia was identified. Pain thresholds decreased significantly at Post MI (MT: 51 [35.6; 74] TT: 44.8…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Ischemia and Reperfusion · Pain Mechanisms and Treatments · Veterinary Pharmacology and Anesthesia
