Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Animal Behavior Processes
2001, Vol. 27, No. 3, 219-238
 

Shock-Induced hyperalgesia: IV. Generality

Mary W. Meagher, Adam R. Ferguson, Eric D. Crown, Sherilyn McLemore, Tamara E. King, Amy N. Sieve, and James W. Grau
Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
 

Brief moderate shock (3, 0.75 s, 1.0 mA) has opposite effects on different measures of pain, inducing antinociception on the tail-flick test while lowering vocalization thresholds to shock and heat (hyperalgesia) and enhancing fear conditioned by a gridshock unconditioned stimulus (US). This study examined the generality of shock-induced hyperalgesia under a range of conditions and explored parallels to sensitized startle. Reduced vocalization thresholds to shock and antinociception emerged at a similar shock intensity. Sever shocks (3, 25 s, 1.0 mA or 3,2 s, 3.0 mA) lowered vocalization threshold to shock but increased vocalization and motor thrsholds to heat and undermined fear conditioned by a gridshock or a startling tone US. All shock schedules facilitated startle, but only brief-moderate shock inflated fear conditioning. The findings suggest that brief-moderate shock enhances the affective impact of aversive stimuli, whereas severe shocks attenuate pain.

 

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