• Mol Pain · Jan 2011

    Review

    Long-term potentiation in spinal nociceptive pathways as a novel target for pain therapy.

    • Ruth Ruscheweyh, Oliver Wilder-Smith, Ruth Drdla, Xian-Guo Liu, and Jürgen Sandkühler.
    • Department of Neurophysiology, Center for Brain Research, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
    • Mol Pain. 2011 Jan 1; 7: 20.

    AbstractLong-term potentiation (LTP) in nociceptive spinal pathways shares several features with hyperalgesia and has been proposed to be a cellular mechanism of pain amplification in acute and chronic pain states. Spinal LTP is typically induced by noxious input and has therefore been hypothesized to contribute to acute postoperative pain and to forms of chronic pain that develop from an initial painful event, peripheral inflammation or neuropathy. Under this assumption, preventing LTP induction may help to prevent the development of exaggerated postoperative pain and reversing established LTP may help to treat patients who have an LTP component to their chronic pain. Spinal LTP is also induced by abrupt opioid withdrawal, making it a possible mechanism of some forms of opioid-induced hyperalgesia. Here, we give an overview of targets for preventing LTP induction and modifying established LTP as identified in animal studies. We discuss which of the various symptoms of human experimental and clinical pain may be manifestations of spinal LTP, review the pharmacology of these possible human LTP manifestations and compare it to the pharmacology of spinal LTP in rodents.

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