• Pain Med · Oct 2010

    Neurosteroids and self-reported pain in veterans who served in the U.S. Military after September 11, 2001.

    • Jason D Kilts, Larry A Tupler, Francis J Keefe, Victoria M Payne, Robert M Hamer, Jennifer C Naylor, Rohana P Calnaido, Rajendra A Morey, Jennifer L Strauss, Gillian Parke, Mark W Massing, Nagy A Youssef, Lawrence J Shampine, tVeterans Affairs Mid-Atlantic Mental Illness, Research, Education and Clinical Center Workgroup, and Christine E Marx.
    • Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27705, USA.
    • Pain Med. 2010 Oct 1;11(10):1469-76.

    ObjectiveNearly half of Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans experience continued pain post-deployment. Several investigations report analgesic effects of allopregnanolone and other neurosteroids in animal models, but few data are currently available focusing on neurosteroids in clinical populations. Allopregnanolone positively modulates GABA(A) receptors and demonstrates pronounced analgesic and anxiolytic effects in rodents, yet studies examining the relationship between pain and allopregnanolone in humans are limited. We thus hypothesized that endogenous allopregnanolone and other neurosteroid levels may be negatively correlated with self-reported pain symptoms in humans.DesignWe determined serum neurosteroid levels by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (allopregnanolone, pregnenolone) or radioimmunoassay (dehydroepiandrosterone [DHEA], progesterone, DHEA sulfate [DHEAS]) in 90 male veterans who served in the U.S. military after September 11, 2001. Self-reported pain symptoms were assessed in four areas (low back pain, chest pain, muscle soreness, headache). Stepwise linear regression analyses were conducted to investigate the relationship between pain assessments and neurosteroids, with the inclusion of smoking, alcohol use, age, and history of traumatic brain injury as covariates.SettingDurham VA Medical Center.ResultsAllopregnanolone levels were inversely associated with low back pain (P=0.044) and chest pain (P=0.013), and DHEA levels were inversely associated with muscle soreness (P=0.024). DHEAS levels were positively associated with chest pain (P=0.001). Additionally, there was a positive association between traumatic brain injury and muscle soreness (P=0.002).ConclusionsNeurosteroids may be relevant to the pathophysiology of self-reported pain symptoms in this veteran cohort, and could represent future pharmacological targets for pain disorders.Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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