• J Pain · Oct 2019

    Evaluation of post-surgical hyperalgesia and sensitization after open inguinal hernia repair: a useful model for neuropathic pain?

    • Daniel W Wheeler, Anuj Bhatia, Vaithianadan Mani, Sara Kinna, Andrew Bell, Yvonne Boyle, Boris A Chizh, David K Menon, and Michael C Lee.
    • Division of Anaesthesia, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
    • J Pain. 2019 Oct 1; 20 (10): 119912081199-1208.

    AbstractCutaneous mechanical hyperalgesia can be induced in healthy volunteers in early phase analgesic studies to model central sensitization, a key mechanism of persistent pain. However, such hyperalgesia is short-lived (a matter of hours), and is used only for assessing only single drug doses. In contrast, postsurgical peri-incisional hyperalgesia may be more persistent and hence be a more useful model for the assessment of the efficacy of new analgesics. We undertook quantitative sensory testing in 18 patients at peri-incisional and nonoperated sites before open inguinal hernia repair and up to the 24th postsurgical week. The spatial extent of punctate hyperalgesia and brush allodynia at the peri-incisional site were greatest at weeks 2 and 4, but had resolved by week 24. Heat allodynia, suggestive of local inflammation or peripheral sensitization, was not observed; instead, there were deficits in cold and heat sensory detection that persisted until week 24. The findings suggest that central sensitization contributes significantly to mechanical hyperalgesia at the peri-incisional site. The prolonged duration of hyperalgesia would be advantageous as a pain model, but there was considerable variability of mechanical hyperalgesia in the cohort; the challenges of recruitment may limit its use to small, early phase analgesic studies. PERSPECTIVE: Peri-incisional mechanical hyperalgesia persists for ≥4 weeks after open inguinal hernia repair and reflects central sensitization; this may have usefulness as a model of chronic pain to assess the potential of antineuropathic analgesics.Copyright © 2019 the American Pain Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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