Articles: hyperalgesia.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · May 2019
Ultrasound therapy reduces persistent post-thoracotomy tactile allodynia and spinal substance P expression in rats.
Therapeutic ultrasound (TU) alleviates nerve injury-associated pain, while the molecular mechanisms are less clear. This is an investigator-initiated experimental study to evaluate the mechanisms and effects of ultrasound on prolonged post-thoracotomy pain in a rodent model. ⋯ The results of this study suggest an increase in mechanical withdrawal thresholds and subcutaneous temperature, as well as a downregulation of spinal substance P and IL-1β, in the group which received ultrasound treatment. The regulation of spinal substance P and IL-1β may mediate potential effects of this non-invasive treatment.
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Review Meta Analysis
Analgesic impact of intra-operative opioids vs. opioid-free anaesthesia: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Opioids are administered peri-operatively for postoperative analgesia, and intra-operatively to control the sympathetic response to surgical stimuli, frequently as a surrogate for presumed pain. However, opioid use during surgery is a matter of dispute in contemporary practice and carries the risk of side-effects such as postoperative nausea and vomiting. This meta-analysis investigated whether opioid-inclusive, compared with opioid-free anaesthesia, would reduce postoperative pain, without increasing the rate of postoperative nausea and vomiting. ⋯ Pain scores at rest at two postoperative hours were equivalent in the opioid-inclusive and opioid-free groups with a mean difference (95%CI) of 0.2 (-0.2 to 0.5), I2 = 83%, p = 0.38 and a high quality of evidence. Similarly, there was high-quality evidence that the rate of postoperative nausea and vomiting was reduced in the opioid-free group, with a risk ratio (95%CI) of 0.77 (0.61-0.97), I2 = 16%, p = 0.03 and high-quality evidence for a similar length of stay in the recovery area, the mean difference (95%CI) being 0.6 (-8.2 to 9.3), min, I2 = 60%, p = 0.90. As there is strong evidence that opioid-inclusive anaesthesia does not reduce postoperative pain, but is associated with more postoperative nausea and vomiting, when compared with opioid-free anaesthesia, we suggest that anaesthetists should reconsider their intra-operative opioid choices on a case-by-case basis.
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Mechanical allodynia is pain caused by normally innocuous mechanical stimuli and is a cardinal and intractable symptom of neuropathic pain. Roles of low-threshold mechanoreceptors (LTMRs), including Aβ fibers, in mechanical allodynia have previously been proposed, but the necessity and sufficiency of LTMRs in allodynia have not been fully determined. Recent technological advances have made it possible to achieve subpopulation-specific ablation, silencing or stimulation, and to dissect and elucidate complex neuronal circuitry. ⋯ Whole-cell recording has revealed that optical Aβ stimulation after nerve injury causes excitation of lamina I dorsal horn neurons, which are normally silent by this stimulation. Moreover, Aβ stimulation after nerve injury results in activation of central amygdaloid neurons and produces aversive behaviors. In summary, these findings indicate that optogenetics is a powerful approach for investigating LTMR-derived pain (resembling mechanical allodynia) with sensory and emotional features after nerve injury and for discovering novel and effective drugs to treat neuropathic pain.
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Central poststroke pain (CPSP) is a neuropathic pain syndrome arising after a lesion of the central nervous system owing to cerebrovascular insult. Impaired daily activities and reduced quality of life in people suffering from CPSP justify the need for improved treatment. The detailed mechanism of CPSP is not well understood, but central disinhibition has been suggested. ⋯ Moreover, compared with the current first-line drug gabapentin for central neuropathic pain, an early treatment of EET showed greater efficacy in the secondary prevention of CPSP. Taken together, this study provided a proof of concept that EETs may have anti-CPSP effect by reserving normal thalamic inhibition through AP-δGABAAR signaling. PERSPECTIVE: Agents targeting EETs may serve as potential therapeutic options for stroke, the use of which at the initial period could not only block further nerve damage but also prevent the occurrence of CPSP.
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Reelin (Reln) and Disabled-1 (Dab1) participate in the Reln-signaling pathway and when either is deleted, mutant mice have the same spinally mediated behavioral abnormalities, increased sensitivity to noxious heat and a profound loss in mechanical sensitivity. Both Reln and Dab1 are highly expressed in dorsal horn areas that receive and convey nociceptive information, Laminae I-II, lateral Lamina V, and the lateral spinal nucleus (LSN). Lamina I contains both projection neurons and interneurons that express Neurokinin-1 receptors (NK1Rs) and they transmit information about noxious heat both within the dorsal horn and to the brain. ⋯ Next, we asked whether these ectopically placed and noxious-heat responsive NK1R neurons participated in pain behavior. Ablation of the superficial NK1Rs with an intrathecal injection of a substance P analog conjugated to the toxin saporin (SSP-SAP) eliminated the thermal hypersensitivity of dab1-/- mice, without altering their mechanical insensitivity. These results suggest that ectopically positioned NK1R-expressing neurons underlie the heat hyperalgesia of Reelin-signaling pathway mutants, but do not contribute to their profound mechanical insensitivity.