http://unisci.com/stories/20021/0111026.htm
11-Jan-2002
Pain management is a major issue
for terminal illnesses such as cancer and for many other diseases. Traditional
analgesics, such as morphine, are seriously flawed because they often provide
insufficient relief and can cause unwanted side effects for those debilitated
by persistent pain.
Although recent research has advanced
the understanding of how the body perceives and reacts to pain, effective
management of chronic pain remains elusive.
Results from a study published in
today's issue of Cell may lead to a dramatic improvement in the effectiveness
of treatments for chronic pain.
Researchers from the United States
and Canada report that a protein called DREAM (downstream regulatory element
antagonistic modulator) appears to play a specific role in mediating pain
responses.
Mice lacking DREAM were much less
responsive than normal mice to a variety of painful stimuli. These included
tests that caused acute pain, such as heat, pressure on the paw and injection
of noxious substances, and also chronic inflammatory pain, which is more
similar to the type of pain felt in, for example, arthritis.
The DREAM-deficient mice were normal
in all other respects, suggesting that DREAM action is specific for pain
pathways and may thus be a good target for therapeutic intervention.
Pharmacological studies showed that
the reduction in pain perception in DREAM-deficient mice involves specific
receptor molecules in the brain and spinal cord that are known to be important
for regulation of pain perception.
DREAM acts to suppress the production
of proteins involved in modulating pain perception, although precisely
how this leads to control of pain perception is still unclear.
These results suggest that modulation
of DREAM function could be used to alter the threshold of pain perception.
This could be particularly useful for the treatment of chronic pain, where
a permanent reduction in the ability to sense pain could produce a dramatic
improvement in quality of life.
Overall, the results provide important
new information about the mechanisms that underlie pain responses and highlight
an exciting new target for the development of specific and effective pain
therapies.
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