(Press-News.org) LEXINGTON, Ky. -- The bodies of mammals, including humans, respond to injury by releasing endogenous opioids -- compounds that mitigate acute pain. A team of researchers led by those at the University of Kentucky has uncovered groundbreaking new information about how the body responds to traumatic injury with the development of a surprisingly long-lasting opioid mechanism of natural chronic pain control. Remarkably, the body develops both physical and physiological dependence on this opioid system, just as it does to opiate narcotic drugs. The research is featured on the cover of the current issue of the prestigious journal Science.
The paper, titled Constitutive Mu-Opioid Receptor Activity Leads to Long-term Endogenous Analgesia and Dependence, was authored by a team including lead author Bradley Taylor of the University of Kentucky College of Medicine Department of Physiology. Other authors include: Gregory Corder, Suzanne Doolen and Renee Donahue of the UK Department of Physiology; Brandon Jutras of the UK College of Medicine Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics; Michelle Winter and Kenneth McCarson of the University of Kansas; Ying He, Zaijie Wang and Xiaoyu Hu of the University of Illinois; Jeffrey Wieskopf and Jeffrey Mogil of McGill University; and Daniel Storm of the University of Washington.
The scientists examined opioid function at sites of pain modulation in the spinal cord. When the opioids act at opioid receptor proteins, they "put the brakes" on the transmission of pain signals to the brain. For example, opioids are released when a patient undergoes surgery, a soldier is wounded in battle, or an athlete runs a marathon. Researchers have known for a while that blocking opioid receptors can increase the intensity of acute pain -- the pain occurring immediately after injury. But up to this point, scientists had been unsure whether blocking opioids could increase chronic, long-term pain. They began their work with the idea that the opioid system is much more important than previously recognized, with an ability to indefinitely oppose chronic pain. If true, they reasoned, then blocking opioids should increase chronic pain.
To simulate human injury, the researchers produced inflammation, or skin incision, in a mouse model, then waited several weeks for signs of pain-like behaviors to subside. They then administered opioid receptor blockers, effectively halting the pain-relieving actions of the opioid system. When the opioid system (which the authors use the term MORCA, for mu opioid receptor constitutive activity) was blocked, the mice reverted to a set of behaviors associated with the experience of pain. Surprisingly, they also experienced symptoms similar to the known effects of opioid withdrawal in the drug addict: tremor, jumping and shakiness. These results were observed even up to six and a half months after pain had seemingly resolved. The long-lasting nature of the phenomenon suggests that endogenous opioid analgesia silently continues long after an injury has healed.
In other words, long after an acute injury has healed, MORCA continues to "put the brakes" on pain. When MORCAis blocked, the "accelerator" is allowed to run free, and chronic pain reappears.
Because the body appears to develop a reliance on MORCA that parallels the addiction of a synthetic opioid user, and because it is known that stress is a key factor in causing relapse in opioid addicts, it follows that stress may also be a key factor in relapse in chronic pain patients. Thus, the authors speculate that stress could interfere with endogenous MORCA analgesia, leading to the emergence of widespread, rampant chronic pain such as is observed in a range of conditions, including fibromyalgia.
This research provides some answers to how the body responds to pain, but also raises questions. To return to the "brake and accelerator" metaphor, future studies are needed to better understand the long-term consequences of simultaneously pressing the accelerator and the brake on pain. In other words, how can we either prevent the "brake pads" from wearing out, or replace them when they do?
###
For more on the molecular and cellular science behind this research, refer to the complete article published in the current edition of Science.
Groundbreaking pain research by University of Kentucky scientists
2013-09-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Clues to the growth of the colossus in Coma
2013-09-20
A team of astronomers has discovered enormous arms of hot gas in the Coma cluster of galaxies by using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA's XMM-Newton. These features, which span at least half a million light years, provide insight into how the Coma cluster has grown through mergers of smaller groups and clusters of galaxies to become one of the largest structures in the Universe held together by gravity.
A new composite image, with Chandra data in pink and optical data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey appearing in white and blue, features these spectacular arms. ...
Mantas, devil rays butchered for apothecary trade now identifiable
2013-09-20
Since dried filters from the mouths of filter-feeding rays hit apothecary shop menus in Asia -- the thought being that eating ground-up filters will cleanse one's liver -- there's been no way to know which of these gentle-natured rays was being slaughtered.
Unlike predatory rays that attack and crush prey with their mouths, the filter-feeder rays eat plankton particles, larvae and fish eggs that they sieve from seawater. Most lack barbs other rays are notorious for, and the filter-feeders are generally considered harmless, although one group is provocatively named devil ...
NASA sees Usagi become a typhoon
2013-09-20
What was a tropical storm rapidly intensified into Typhoon Usagi within 24 hours as it moves through the Northwestern Pacific Ocean. NASA satellite data revealed a 20-mile-wide eye and bands of thunderstorms spiraling into the center of the monster storm.
The MODIS instrument, or Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer aboard NASA's Terra satellite captured an amazing image of Typhoon Usagi on Sept. 19 at 02:25 UTC moving near the Philippines. The image showed spiraling bands of thunderstorms wrapping into the well-developed center of circulation and a clear eye. ...
Study suggests check-cashing stores target areas with high crime
2013-09-20
TORONTO, Sept. 19, 2013—Cheque-cashing outlets may be strategically targeting persons who live in high-crime neighbourhoods, according to researchers at St. Michael's Hospital.
Dr. Joel Ray, a physician-researcher at the hospital's Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, compared the density of cheque-cashing places in Toronto neighbourhoods with police-reported crime data. Along with his colleagues, Dr. Ray observed a nearly seven times higher rate of cheque-cashing places in neighbourhoods with the highest rate of violent crime, even after accounting for nearby retail alcohol ...
New islet cell transplant procedure offers improved outcomes for patients with type 1 diabetes
2013-09-20
Philadelphia – The latest approach to islet transplantation, in which clusters of insulin-producing cells known as islets are transplanted from a donor pancreas into another person's liver, has produced substantially improved results for patients with type 1 diabetes, and may offer a more durable alternative to a whole pancreas transplant. Participants in the new study received islet cells isolated from the pancreas of organ donors to help their bodies produce insulin, the life-sustaining hormone responsible for absorbing glucose from the blood. The new approach, which ...
Researchers tease apart workings of a common gene
2013-09-20
NEW YORK (September 19, 2013) -- Researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College have discovered why a tiny alteration in a brain gene, found in 20 percent of the population, contributes to the risk for anxiety, depression and memory loss.
Their discovery, reported in Nature Communications, describes new functions for the alteration, a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene. This gene is a powerful regulator of the growth and function of neurons, and the establishment of brain circuitry. The common alteration occurs when ...
Psychopathic traits in teenagers not cast in stone
2013-09-20
Most youths are concerned about other people's feelings, they feel bad or guilty when they have done something wrong and they adhere to social rules. A small group of youths, however, does not. These youths express psychopathic personality traits that are associated with adult psychopathy, a serious personality disorder that is linked with antisocial behavior and criminality. A study conducted by Selma Salihovic and her research team at Örebro University in Sweden shows that for this small group of youth, psychopathic traits remain quite stable over a period of four years. ...
SLU researcher finds a turtle eye muscle adapts to deal with obstructed vision
2013-09-20
ST. LOUIS – In a recent study published in The Journal of Comparative Neurology, Saint Louis University professor of pharmacological and physiological science Michael Ariel, Ph.D., reported surprising findings about the eye movements of pond turtles who can retract their head deep into their shell. While researchers expected that the pond turtle's eyes would operate like other animals with eyes on the side of their heads, this particular species of turtle appears to have characteristics of both front and side-eyed animals, affecting a specific eye muscle's direction of ...
Journal of AIDS Oct. issue research highlights announced
2013-09-20
Philadelphia, Pa. (September 19, 2013) – JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes announced its research article highlights from the October issue now available on the journal website. The journal is published by Wolters Kluwer Health.
Earlier HIV Treatment Increases Costs But Improves Survival
(note: article first appeared online in April 2013 JAIDS as publish ahead of print)
Updates of Lifetime Costs of Care and Quality of Life Estimates for HIV-Infected Persons in the United States: Late Versus Early Diagnosis and Entry into Care, led by Paul G. Farnham, ...
NASA sees heavy rains and hot towers in Hurricane Manuel
2013-09-20
NASA's TRMM satellite passed over Manuel on Sept. 19 at 0116 UTC and measured its rainfall as it was strengthening into a hurricane. TRMM noticed heavy rainfall and some hot towering thunderstorms, which were indications that the storm was intensifying. NASA's Aqua satellite captured an infrared image that showed Manuel was making landfall during the morning of Sept. 19, and at 11 a.m. EDT, Hurricane Manuel officially made landfall near Culican, Mexico.
A Hurricane Warning is in effect for La Cruz to Topolobampo and a Tropical Storm Watch is in effect from north of Topolobampo ...