T.P. - lost in translation Flashcards
What is chronic pain?
IASP: ‘Pain without biological value that has persisted beyond the normal tissue healing time’ (>3 months)
5 million in UK develop CP annually
Only 2/3rds will recover that year (Chief Medical Officer’s report 2009)
- Back pain = £12.3 billion/year (cost of pain from all causes much higher)
What is neuropathic pain?
‘Pain resulting from damage to the nervous system’ (sensory pathway)
Characteristically:
- odd symptoms (spontaneous pains without provocation or tissue injury - out of proportion)
- often chronic (i.e. >3months)
- difficult to treat using conventional analgesics e.g. ibuprofen, morphine
Surprisingly common:
- estimated as affecting 1.5% of US population
Examples of neuropathic pains:
- diabetic, trigeminal & post-herpetic neuralgia
- post-stroke, phantom limb, MS pains
Current treatment for NP pain (general)
Drugs
- conventional analgesics (opiates, NSAIDs)
- antidepressants, anticonvulsants (most effective we have but still not effective)
- topical lidocaine/capsaicin
- ketamine, cannabinoids
Interventional
- nerve blocks / epidural steroids
- spinal cord stimulators / TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation)
Therapy
* psychological - CBT * physiotherapy * relaxation
Effectiveness of current treatments - as shown by Finnerup et al (2015)
Series of meta-analyses summarising effectiveness of treatments (from RCTs)
At best, TREAT between 2-6 patients for ONE patient to get 50% improvement in pain
Also treat 5-20 patients to HARM one
* not a good risk/benefit balance
Describe substance P discovery
First isolated by von Euler & Gaddum (1931) - powdery substance
Caused hypotension & smooth muscle relaxation
- Abundant: especially in dorsal horn of cord
- Amino acid structure: undecapeptide (11 amino acids) - (1970)
*Lembeck (1953) proposed role as pain transmitter
Describe substance P discovery
First isolated by von Euler & Gaddum (1931) - powdery substance
Caused hypotension & smooth muscle relaxation. Lembeck (1953) proposed role as pain transmitter.
Abundant: especially in dorsal horn of cord (lamina I-III)
1970: Amino acid structure = undecapeptide (11 amino acids).
What did Nilsson (1974) show about SP?
Immunocytochemistry showed high levels of SP in Lamina I-III
Present in small DRG cell bodies
* 6-20% of all DRG cells * small cells = nociceptors with C afferents
*Estimated to be in 50% of all C-fibre neurones (nociceptors) - (McCarthy & Lawson 1989) - supports involvement in nociceptive transmission
What did Takahashi & Otsuka (1975) show about SP?
Spinal SP levels drop when dorsal roots sectioned
*Cut afferents - axons in cord degenerate: Suggests that lots of the SP in the spinal cord was coming from the afferents (suggests it is release from the afferents)