Articles: hyperalgesia.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2010
N-antipyrine-3, 4-dichloromaleimide, an effective cyclic imide for the treatment of chronic pain: the role of the glutamatergic system.
In recent years, cyclic imides have attracted the attention of the scientific community because of their promising therapeutic potential. Studies with the compound N-antipyrine-3,4-dichloromaleimide (NA-3,4-DCM) also demonstrated an antinociceptive effect in formalin or capsaicin models of nociception, and that it reduced acetic acid-induced abdominal writhing in mice. ⋯ These results provide strong evidence that NA-3,4-DCM produces antihypernociception in mice at peripheral, spinal, and supraspinal sites, and that interaction with the group I metabotropic glutamate receptors and NMDA receptors contributes to the mechanisms underlying its effect.
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Clinical Trial
NGF induces non-inflammatory localized and lasting mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity in human skin.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) modulates sensitivity and sprouting of nociceptors. We explored the spatial and temporal sensitization induced by NGF injection (1 microg) in human skin. Hyperalgesia was investigated in 16 volunteers (36+/-9 years) at day 1, 3, 7, 21, and 49. ⋯ Spatially restricted hyperalgesia indicates a peripheral rather than central mechanism. The temporal profile of lasting nociceptor sensitization suggests an altered peripheral axonal expression of sensory proteins specifically leading to mechanical and thermal sensitization. Intradermal NGF administration provokes a pattern of sensitization that can be used as experimental model for neuropathic pain.
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Opioids are invaluable in the treatment of moderate-to-severe pain. Unfortunately, their prolonged use may be associated with the onset of opioid-induced hyperalgesia (OIH). This review focuses on recent clinical studies that support or refute the existence of OIH in patients. ⋯ Improvements in paradoxical pain intensity upon discontinuation of opioid therapy suggests that a multidisciplinary method of pain relief is favoured for chronic-pain patients. Quantitative-sensory testing of pain is offered as the most appropriate way of diagnosing hyperalgesia. We can, thus far only reliably validate the existence of OIH development in normal human volunteers receiving acute-morphine infusions.
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This study investigated the role of TRPA1 in the development and maintenance of mechanical and cold hyperalgesia in persistent inflammation induced by Complete Freund's Adjuvant (CFA) in mice. The intraplantar (i.pl.) injection of CFA induced a long lasting (28 days) hyperalgesia for both mechanical and thermal (cold) stimuli. The intraperitoneal (i.p., 30-300 mg/kg), intraplantar (i.pl., 100 microg/site) or intrathecal (i.t., 10 microg/site) injection of the TRPA1 selective antagonist HC-030031 significantly reduced the mechanical hyperalgesia evaluated by the von Frey hair test. ⋯ Interestingly, both TRPA1 protein expression and mRNA were over-expressed in spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of mice treated with CFA, an effect that was fully prevented by the pre-treatment with the TRPA1 antagonist HC-030031. Collectively, the present results showed that TRPA1 present at either peripheral or spinal sites play a relevant role in the development and maintenance of both mechanical and cold hyperalgesia during CFA-induced inflammation. Thus, TRPA1 selective antagonists represent promising candidates to treat hyperalgesia in persistent inflammatory states.
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Chronic muscle pain of the neck, shoulder and low back is quite common and often related to a stressed condition. In this study we tried to make a model of long-lasting muscle mechanical hyperalgesia based on one type of stress, repeated cold stress (RCS) (Kita T, Hata T, Yoneda R, Okage T. Stress state caused by alternation of rhythm in environmental temperature, and the functional disorders in mice and rats. ⋯ Bilateral cutaneous punctuate hyperalgesia was also observed with RCS at -3 degrees C. Intramuscular injection of lidocaine confirmed that the muscle was hyperalgesic. RCS might serve as a useful model for study of the mechanism of chronic muscle pain and its treatment.