Guest guest Posted December 28, 2001 Report Share Posted December 28, 2001 New Pain Pathway s Messages from the Pancreas, TooLibrary: MED Keywords: PAIN PANCREAS VISCERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM NERVES Description: Scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) have confirmed that a newly discovered bundle of nerve fibers known to carry painful impulses from pelvic organs like the colon also transmits pain messages from the pancreas, an organ positioned higher in the body. 11/8/98 University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Public Affairs 301 University Boulevard, Suite 136, Galveston, Texas 77555-0802 DATE: November 5, 1998 CONTACT: Alana Mikkelsen, ; email: amikkels@... EMBARGOED until 1 p.m., Pacific time, on Sunday, Nov. 8 to coincide with a poster presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience. SOURCES: During the Neuroscience meeting: Karin High will be at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel between Nov. 7 and 12. Call . Otherwise, reach High in Galveston at or kwhigh@.... NEW PAIN PATHWAY CARRIES MESSAGES FROM THE PANCREAS, TOO LOS ANGELES-Scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) have confirmed that a newly discovered bundle of nerve fibers known to carry painful impulses from pelvic organs like the colon also transmits pain messages from the pancreas, an organ positioned higher in the body. Those findings-which will be presented Nov. 8 during the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Los Angeles-add weight to results from human and animal studies that suggest the nerve bundle, known as the dorsal column pathway, may mediate pain messages from all internal organs, including the intestines, reproductive organs, bladder, stomach and heart. The dorsal column pathway, which is named for its position in the spinal cord, was only recently discovered to carry pain messages. Before its description by UTMB researchers and Houston neurosurgeon Hirschberg in 1996, scientists thought that only one pathway-known as the spinothalamic tract-relayed pain messages from the body to the brain. Since then, UTMB scientists have been studying the dorsal column pathway-which is also known as the visceral pain pathway because it carries pain messages from the internal organs, or viscera-to determine where in the spinal cord it is located, what kinds of stimuli it responds to, and what responses it produces in the brain. Based on their and others' research, conducted mostly in rats and monkeys, it now appears that the spinothalamic tract is responsible for carrying painful impulses from the skin, while the dorsal column pathway carries painful impulses from the internal organs. The researchers believe that the studies may lead to new treatments for pain arising from the internal organs, which is often resistant to drug therapy and has traditionally been unresponsive to surgical treatment. For example, pancreatitis-a severe inflammation of the pancreas caused by gallstones, excessive alcohol intake or irritation-produces an excruciating pain that is " almost untreatable, " says Karin Westlund High, a UTMB professor of anatomy and neurosciences and principle investigator in the current study. " And it's not very responsive to morphine. " Westlund High, an expert on anatomical studies of pain-related nerve cells, previously showed that at the level of the pelvis, the dorsal column nerve cells are located near the middle of the spinal cord, just under its surface, toward the skin of the back. Knowing that position allowed UTMB neurosurgeon Hank Nauta to relieve intractable bowel pain in a woman by poking a small needle into her spinal cord, severing the dorsal column nerves. Almost two years later, the woman, a cervical cancer patient whose colon had been damaged by radiation treatment, experiences no pelvic pain. Since then, Nauta has performed the procedure on six other patients, with similar positive results. Nauta's surgery built on the successes of Hirschberg, who in the early 1990s severed the dorsal column pathways of eight cancer patients and eliminated intractable pain arising from the colon, ovaries and bladder. Previous surgeries to sever the spinothalamic tract, based on old misconceptions about pain pathways, seldom helped patients with pain originating in internal organs. Despite Nauta and Hirschberg's promising results, however, many physicians are concerned about the possible side effects of performing surgery on a set of nerve cells that has been so little studied. " Surgery is not anybody's first option, " says Westlund High. She adds that operations could be especially risky above the level of the pelvis, where, she has found, the dorsal column nerve fibers fork and veer away from the midline. That more inaccessible position in the spinal cord raises the chances that surgery aimed at interupting the dorsal column pathway might inadvertently cut other important nerve cells, too. Therefore, surgical treatments for pain in abdominal organs like the liver or pancreas probably would be much more complicated than surgical treatments aimed at ablating pain in pelvic organs like the colon, Westlund High predicts. Such complications make it even more important that researchers continue to study the dorsal column pathway and compare it to the more well-known pain pathway, the spinothalamic tract, Westlund High says. " It's very possible that the pharmacology of this new pathway is different from that of the spinothalamic tract, " she continues. " We may find agents that block signals from these nerve cells selectively while leaving other pain signals intact. However, we haven't had a chance to do those studies yet. " Mark E. Armstrong www.top5plus5.com Oregon State Chapter Rep Pancreatitis Association, International Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2001 Report Share Posted December 30, 2001 Thanks Mark. I use to work at UTMB for over ten years in my old nursing day s! Great place ! Lily New Pain Pathway s Messages from the Pancreas > New Pain Pathway s Messages from the Pancreas, TooLibrary: MED > Keywords: PAIN PANCREAS VISCERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM NERVES > Description: Scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) have confirmed that a newly discovered bundle of nerve fibers known to carry painful impulses from pelvic organs like the colon also transmits pain messages from the pancreas, an organ positioned higher in the body. > 11/8/98 > > > University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston > Public Affairs > 301 University Boulevard, Suite 136, Galveston, Texas 77555-0802 > > > > DATE: November 5, 1998 > CONTACT: Alana Mikkelsen, ; email: amikkels@... > > EMBARGOED > until 1 p.m., Pacific time, on Sunday, Nov. 8 > to coincide with a poster presentation at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience. > > SOURCES: > During the Neuroscience meeting: > Karin High will be at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel between Nov. 7 and 12. Call . > Otherwise, reach High in Galveston at or kwhigh@.... > > > NEW PAIN PATHWAY CARRIES MESSAGES FROM THE PANCREAS, TOO > > LOS ANGELES-Scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) have confirmed that a newly discovered bundle of nerve fibers known to carry painful impulses from pelvic organs like the colon also transmits pain messages from the pancreas, an organ positioned higher in the body. > > Those findings-which will be presented Nov. 8 during the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Los Angeles-add weight to results from human and animal studies that suggest the nerve bundle, known as the dorsal column pathway, may mediate pain messages from all internal organs, including the intestines, reproductive organs, bladder, stomach and heart. > > The dorsal column pathway, which is named for its position in the spinal cord, was only recently discovered to carry pain messages. Before its description by UTMB researchers and Houston neurosurgeon Hirschberg in 1996, scientists thought that only one pathway-known as the spinothalamic tract-relayed pain messages from the body to the brain. > > Since then, UTMB scientists have been studying the dorsal column pathway-which is also known as the visceral pain pathway because it carries pain messages from the internal organs, or viscera-to determine where in the spinal cord it is located, what kinds of stimuli it responds to, and what responses it produces in the brain. Based on their and others' research, conducted mostly in rats and monkeys, it now appears that the spinothalamic tract is responsible for carrying painful impulses from the skin, while the dorsal column pathway carries painful impulses from the internal organs. > > The researchers believe that the studies may lead to new treatments for pain arising from the internal organs, which is often resistant to drug therapy and has traditionally been unresponsive to surgical treatment. > > For example, pancreatitis-a severe inflammation of the pancreas caused by gallstones, excessive alcohol intake or irritation-produces an excruciating pain that is " almost untreatable, " says Karin Westlund High, a UTMB professor of anatomy and neurosciences and principle investigator in the current study. " And it's not very responsive to morphine. " > > Westlund High, an expert on anatomical studies of pain-related nerve cells, previously showed that at the level of the pelvis, the dorsal column nerve cells are located near the middle of the spinal cord, just under its surface, toward the skin of the back. Knowing that position allowed UTMB neurosurgeon Hank Nauta to relieve intractable bowel pain in a woman by poking a small needle into her spinal cord, severing the dorsal column nerves. Almost two years later, the woman, a cervical cancer patient whose colon had been damaged by radiation treatment, experiences no pelvic pain. Since then, Nauta has performed the procedure on six other patients, with similar positive results. > > Nauta's surgery built on the successes of Hirschberg, who in the early 1990s severed the dorsal column pathways of eight cancer patients and eliminated intractable pain arising from the colon, ovaries and bladder. Previous surgeries to sever the spinothalamic tract, based on old misconceptions about pain pathways, seldom helped patients with pain originating in internal organs. > > Despite Nauta and Hirschberg's promising results, however, many physicians are concerned about the possible side effects of performing surgery on a set of nerve cells that has been so little studied. > > " Surgery is not anybody's first option, " says Westlund High. She adds that operations could be especially risky above the level of the pelvis, where, she has found, the dorsal column nerve fibers fork and veer away from the midline. That more inaccessible position in the spinal cord raises the chances that surgery aimed at interupting the dorsal column pathway might inadvertently cut other important nerve cells, too. Therefore, surgical treatments for pain in abdominal organs like the liver or pancreas probably would be much more complicated than surgical treatments aimed at ablating pain in pelvic organs like the colon, Westlund High predicts. > > Such complications make it even more important that researchers continue to study the dorsal column pathway and compare it to the more well-known pain pathway, the spinothalamic tract, Westlund High says. > > " It's very possible that the pharmacology of this new pathway is different from that of the spinothalamic tract, " she continues. " We may find agents that block signals from these nerve cells selectively while leaving other pain signals intact. However, we haven't had a chance to do those studies yet. " > Mark E. Armstrong > www.top5plus5.com > Oregon State Chapter Rep > Pancreatitis Association, International > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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