Pain
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Comment Letter Comparative Study
Motor cortex disinhibition in complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)-a unilateral or bilateral phenomenon?
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Osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating disease in which primarily weight-bearing joints undergo progressive degeneration. Despite the widespread prevalence of OA in the adult population, very little is known about the factors responsible for the generation and maintenance of OA pain. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) was identified in the synovial fluid of arthritis patients nearly 20 years ago and the aim of this study was to examine whether VIP could be involved in the generation of OA pain. ⋯ Treatment of OA knees with a single injection of VIP6-28 diminished hindlimb incapacitance while increasing paw withdrawal threshold. This study showed for the first time that peripheral application of VIP causes increased knee joint allodynia and secondary hyperalgesia. Furthermore, antagonists that inhibit VIP activity may prove beneficial in the alleviation of OA pain.
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Damage to peripheral nerves causes significant remodeling of peripheral innervation and can lead to neuropathic pain. Most nociceptive primary afferents are unmyelinated (C fibers) and subdivided into peptidergic and nonpeptidergic fibers. Previous studies have found nerve injury in the trigeminal system to induce changes in small-diameter primary afferent innervation and cause significant autonomic sprouting into the upper dermis of the lower-lip skin of the rat. ⋯ These changes were associated with significant increase in glial-derived nerve growth factor levels in the lower-lip skin. While IB4-saporin treatment had no effect on evoked mechanical thresholds when von Frey hairs were applied to the lower-lip skin, ablation of nonpeptidergic fibers in a chronic constriction injury model caused significant sympathetic and parasympathetic fiber sprouting, and led to an exacerbated pain response. This was an unexpected finding, as it has been suggested that nonpeptidergic fibers play a major role in mechanical pain, and suggests that these fibers play a complex role in the development of neuropathic pain.