Guest guest Posted October 17, 2005 Report Share Posted October 17, 2005 Endogenous opioid system inadequate to ease chronic pain  Oct 13, 2005  Gandey Calgary, AB - While researchers had hoped that tapping into the body's own supply of painkilling peptides would provide a safe and natural treatment for arthritis pain, a new animal study has shown that this approach is ineffective in curbing chronic pain [1]. " We had initially aspired to control pain using naturally occurring compounds in the body. We anticipated that the endogenous opioid system would be effective for pain management, " senior author Dr McDougall (University of Calgary, Alberta) told rheumawire. " We were surprised to find that while the morphinelike compound found in knee joints was able to reduce electrical activity and joint pain in normal and acutely inflamed joints, this was not the case for chronic arthritis. We did not expect this. "  The morphinelike compound McDougall refers to is known as endomorphin 1, and his team studied whether peripheral administration of this endogenous µ-opioid peptide could reduce knee joint pain. Looking at male rats with induced acute and chronic arthritis, they evaluated the effectiveness of endomorphin 1 in comparison with treatment with morphine. The work appears in the October 2005 issue of Arthritis and Rheumatism. According to a news release about the study, previous research on µ- opioid therapy for arthritis has primarily focused on changes occurring in the hours immediately following tissue inflammation. This study is reportedly the first to examine the impact on chronic inflammation. Endomorphin 1 had no observable effect in chronic arthritis In the study, rats were randomly assigned to the different treatment groups, ranging from acute (48-hour) inflammation to chronic (one- week and three-week) inflammation and normal controls. Under anesthesia, the rats were injected endomorphin 1 into arthritic knee joints. Led by Dr Zongming Li (University of Calgary, Alberta), the researchers assessed therapeutic effectiveness by measures of joint edema formation and sensory nerve activity associated with pain.  Future study will need to examine why the body's own pain relievers are not working anymore.   They found that in rats with acute arthritis, endomorphin 1 worked to significantly reduce the hypersensitivity of joint nerves by as much as 75%. But in rats with chronic arthritis, endomorphin 1 had no observable benefit. " This shouldn't be seen as a negative result, " McDougall told rheumawire. " Instead, it opens the door to new questions surrounding why the body's analgesic system isn't working in chronic inflammatory diseases like arthritis. " He added, " Future study will need to examine why the body's own pain relievers are not working anymore. " Li and colleagues conclude, " It is clear that a better understanding of the signaling mechanisms that control µ-opioid-receptor expression during arthritis progression and the identification of systemic factors that can alter this process could have major implications in our understanding of opioid-induced control of chronic joint pain. " http://www.jointandbone.org/viewArticle.do?primaryKey=576645 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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