Prog Neurobiol 121:1–18Ĭrettaz B, Marziniak M, Willeke P, Young P, Hellhammer D, Stumpf A, Burgmer M (2013) Stress-induced allodynia-evidence of increased pain sensitivity in healthy humans and patients with chronic pain after experimentally induced psychosocial stress. Jennings EM, Okine BN, Roche M, Finn DP (2014) Stress-induced hyperalgesia. Raichle KA, Osborne TL, Jensen MP, Ehde DM, Smith DG, Robinson LR (2015) Preoperative state anxiety, acute postoperative pain, and analgesic use in persons undergoing lower limb amputation.
Petrovic NM, Milovanovic DR, Ignjatovic Ristic D, Riznic N, Ristic B, Stepanovic Z (2014) Factors associated with severe postoperative pain in patients with total hip arthroplasty. Ip HY, Abrishami A, Peng PW, Wong J, Chung F (2009) Predictors of postoperative pain and analgesic consumption: a qualitative systematic review. Clin J Pain 28(9):819–841Īli A, Altun D, Oguz BH, Ilhan M, Demircan F, Koltka K (2014) The effect of preoperative anxiety on postoperative analgesia and anesthesia recovery in patients undergoing laparascopic cholecystectomy. Theunissen M, Peters ML, Bruce J, Gramke HF, Marcus MA (2012) Preoperative anxiety and catastrophizing: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the association with chronic postsurgical pain. Perks A, Chakravarti S, Manninen P (2009) Preoperative anxiety in neurosurgical patients. Yilmaz M, Sezer H, Gurler H, Bekar M (2012) Predictors of preoperative anxiety in surgical inpatients.
Nigussie S, Belachew T, Wolancho W (2014) Predictors of preoperative anxiety among surgical patients in Jimma University Specialized Teaching Hospital, South Western Ethiopia. Jawaid M, Mushtaq A, Mukhtar S, Khan Z (2007) Preoperative anxiety before elective surgery. Pending further studies, these findings suggested that GR and spinal microglia may play important roles in the development of preoperative anxiety-induced postoperative hyperalgesia and may serve as novel targets to prevent this phenomenon. Together, these data indicated that inhibition of stress-induced GR activation attenuated the preoperative anxiety-induced exacerbation of postoperative pain, and the suppression of spinal microglia activation may underlie this anti-hyperalgesia effect. The results showed that RU486 suppressed SPS-induced and SPS-potentiated proinflammatory activation of spinal microglia and revealed analgesic effects. Another experiment was conducted by administering RU486, the GC receptor (GR) antagonist, to rats. Inhibition of microglia by pretreatment with minocycline attenuated the SPS-enhanced mechanical allodynia, and this was accompanied by decreased activation of spinal microglia and expression of proinflammatory cytokines. SPS was also found to induce elevated circulating corticosterone levels, potentiate the activation of spinal microglia, and increase the expression of spinal proinflammatory cytokines. Behavioral testing revealed that preoperative SPS enhanced the mechanical allodynia induced by plantar incision.
The study used an animal model that exposed rats to single prolonged stress (SPS) procedure to induce preoperative anxiety-like behaviors 24 h before the plantar incisional surgery. As stress-induced glucocorticoids (GCs) were reported to sensitize the activation of microglia, the present study investigated whether and how GCs and microglia played in the process of preoperative anxiety-induced postoperative hyperalgesia. Clinically, preoperative anxiety adversely affected postoperative hyperalgesia. Here's the output from that run if it helps.
I successfully ran one trial before, not sure why it stopped working. If there's a way to fix this problem then all these previous problems would not matter. It just causes later complications because it seems that DESeq will mistake it as a column of samples. That said, I could totally make the gene names my first row. I just did not understand why that file would be allowed to run by DESeq. So their row names were not numerical either.
Exactly like the example file, where they had 6 columns plus gene names as row.names. The gene names are the row.names, not a column, and when you run dim() on the file it did say 4 columns. I think I'll just look into it and see it that's where the problem is.īut clarification on my original problem: my data had 4 columns, not 5. My data file is a mess because I combined it from four smaller files each containing the counts of only one sample.