157 research outputs found

    Combination Drug Therapy for Pain following Chronic Spinal Cord Injury

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    A number of mechanisms have been elucidated that maintain neuropathic pain due to spinal cord injury (SCI). While target-based therapeutics are being developed based on elucidation of these mechanisms, treatment for neuropathic SCI pain has not been entirely satisfactory due in part to the significant convergence of neurological and inflammatory processes that maintain the neuropathic pain state. Thus, a combination drug treatment strategy, wherein several pain-related mechanism are simultaneously engaged, could be more efficacious than treatment against individual mechanisms alone. Also, by engaging several targets at once, it may be possible to reduce the doses of the individual drugs, thereby minimizing the potential for adverse side effects. Positive preclinical and clinical studies have demonstrated improved efficacy of combination drug treatment over single drug treatment in neuropathic pain of peripheral origin, and perhaps such combinations could be utilized for neuropathic SCI pain. At the same time, there are mechanisms that distinguish SCI from peripheral neuropathic pain, so novel combination therapies will be needed

    Optimization of Adrenal Medullary Allograft Conditions for Pain Alleviation

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    Previous findings in our laboratory have demonstrated that transplants of adrenal medullary tissue into the spinal subarachnoid space can alleviate pain, most likely via sustained local release of pain-reducing neuroactive substances from the transplanted chromaffin cells. The success of this work in animal models has led to preliminary clinical trials with promising results. However, before large-scale clinical studies are undertaken, numerous issues should be resolved, many of which can be readily addressed initially in the laboratory. One of these is the amount of donor adrenal medullary tissue necessary to produce long-term antinociception. Although tissue from two adrenal glands has generally been used, it is unknown whether less would be equally effective, or more could increase analgesic potency. To address this, various amounts of adrenal medullary tissue, ranging from one to ten donor glands, were used. Results showed lowered antinociceptive benefits when only one adrenal medulla was used, but only small and short-lived increases when donor material was increased substantially. In addition, assays of atecholamine and Met-enkephalin release in the host spinal CSF revealed only slight further increases following the transplantation of more than 2-4 glands. These results indicate that a small amount of adrenal medullary tissue is necessary and sufficient to produce sustained antinociception, and suggest that higher amounts may result in tolerance development or feedback inhibition. Another important issue is the ability to retain antinociceptive potency if donor tissue is maintained in culture prior to transplantation, since the coordination of donor harvesting and recipient availability is often difficult. To address this, donor adrenal medullary tissue was maintained in explant culture for various periods following dissection. Results indicated that adrenal medullary tissue can be maintained in culture for up to 30 days prior to transplantation without decrement in antinociceptive potency, and that a period of 7-21 days results in improved graft viability. Results of this study indicate that some of the critical issues for successful neural transplantation outcomes can be initially addressed in pre-clinical studies

    Antinociceptive effects of topical mepivacaine in a rat model of HIV-associated peripheral neuropathic pain

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    BACKGROUND: A consequence of HIV infection is sensory neuropathy, a debilitating condition that degrades the quality of life of HIV patients. Furthermore, life-extending antiretroviral treatment may exacerbate HIV sensory neuropathy. Analgesics that relieve other neuropathic pains show little or no efficacy in ameliorating HIV sensory neuropathy. Thus, there is a need for analgesics for people with this particular pain. While lidocaine is used in the management of painful peripheral neuropathies, another local anesthetic mepivacaine, with a potentially improved bioavailability, could be utilized for the management of HIV neuropathic pain. METHODS: The efficacy of topical anesthetics was evaluated in a preclinical rodent model of painful peripheral neuropathy induced by epineural administration of the HIV envelope protein gp120 delivered using saturated oxidized cellulose implanted around the sciatic nerve. Beginning at 2 weeks following gp120 administration, the effects of local anesthetics topically applied via gauze pads were tested on heat and mechanical hyperalgesia in the hind paw. Rats were tested using several concentrations of mepivacaine or lidocaine during the following 2 weeks. RESULTS: By 2 weeks following epineural gp120 implantation, the ipsilateral hind paw developed significant hypersensitivity to noxious pressure and heat hyperalgesia. A short-lasting, concentration-dependent amelioration of pressure and heat hyperalgesia was observed following topical application of mepivacaine to the ipsilateral plantar hind paw. By contrast, topical lidocaine ameliorated heat hyperalgesia in a concentration-dependent manner but not pressure hyperalgesia. Equipotent concentrations of mepivacaine and lidocaine applied topically to the tail of mice significantly increased tail withdrawal latencies in the tail flick test, demonstrating that both local anesthetics attenuate responding to a brief noxious stimulus. CONCLUSION: These findings showed that mepivacaine, rather than lidocaine, consistently attenuated two distinct symptoms of neuropathic pain and suggest that topical formulations of this local anesthetic could have utility in the alleviation of clinical HIV neuropathic pain

    Origin of Afferent Projections into Bovine Chromaffin Cell Implants in the Rat Periaqueductal Gray Determined by Retrograde and Anterograde Tracing

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    We have previously described long-term survival of isolated bovine chromaffin cell suspension grafts in the periaqueductal gray of adult rats. Electron microscopic analysis of the graft sites revealed synapses on the transplanted chromaffin cells. The origin of these synapses is not known, but they are probably derived from the host since the initial grafts were suspensions of chromaffin cells that were essentially free of other cell types

    Predifferentiated GABAergic Neural Precursor Transplants for Alleviation of Dysesthetic Central Pain Following Excitotoxic Spinal Cord Injury

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    Intraspinal quisqualic acid (QUIS) injury induce (i) mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia, (ii) progressive self-injurious overgrooming of the affected dermatome. The latter is thought to resemble painful dysesthesia observed in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients. We have reported previously loss of endogenous GABA immunoreactive (IR) cells in the superficial dorsal horn of QUIS rats 2 weeks post injury. Further histological evaluation showed that GABA-, glycine-, and synaptic vesicular transporter VIAAT-IR persisted but were substantially decreased in the injured spinal cord. In this study, partially differentiated GABA-IR embryonic neural precursor cells (NPCs) were transplanted into the spinal cord of QUIS rats to reverse overgrooming by replenishing lost inhibitory circuitry. Rat E14 NPCs were predifferentiated in 0.1 ng/ml FGF-2 for 4 h prior to transplantation. In vitro immunocytochemistry of transplant cohort showed large population of GABA-IR NPCs that double labeled with nestin but few colocalized with NeuN, indicating partial maturation. Two weeks following QUIS lesion at T12-L1, and following the onset of overgrooming, NPCs were transplanted into the QUIS lesion sites; bovine adrenal fibroblast cells were used as control. Overgrooming was reduced in >55.5% of NPC grafted animals, with inverse relationship between the number of surviving GABA-IR cells and the size of overgrooming. Fibroblast-control animals showed a progressive worsening of overgrooming. At 3 weeks post-transplantation, numerous GABA-, nestin-, and GFAP-IR cells were present in the lesion site. Surviving grafted GABA-IR NPCs were NeuN+ and GFAP−. These results indicate that partially differentiated NPCs survive and differentiate in vivo into neuronal cells following transplantation into an injured spinal cord. GABA-IR NPC transplants can restore lost dorsal horn inhibitory signaling and are useful in alleviating central pain following SCI

    A Framework for the Development, Design and Implementation of a Sustained Arctic Ocean Observing System

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    Rapid Arctic warming drives profound change in the marine environment that have significant socio-economic impacts within the Arctic and beyond, including climate and weather hazards, food security, transportation, infrastructure planning and resource extraction. These concerns drive efforts to understand and predict Arctic environmental change and motivate development of an Arctic Region Component of the Global Ocean Observing System (ARCGOOS) capable of collecting the broad, sustained observations needed to support these endeavors. This paper provides a roadmap for establishing the ARCGOOS. ARCGOOS development must be underpinned by a broadly-endorsed framework grounded in high-level policy drivers and the scientific and operational objectives that stem from them. This should be guided by a transparent, internationally accepted governance structure with recognized authority and organizational relationships with the national agencies that ultimately execute network plans. A governance model for ARCGOOS must guide selection of objectives, assess performance and fitness-to-purpose, and advocate for resources. A requirements-based framework for an ARCGOOS begins with the Societal Benefit Areas (SBAs) that underpin the system. SBAs motivate investments and define the system's science and operational objectives. Objectives can then be used to identify key observables and their scope. The domains of planning/policy, strategy, and tactics define scope ranging from decades and basins to focused observing with near real time data delivery. Patterns emerge when this analysis is integrated across an appropriate set of SBAs and science/operational objectives, identifying impactful variables and the scope of the measurements. When weighted for technological readiness and logistical feasibility, this can be used to select Essential ARCGOOS Variables, analogous to Essential Ocean Variables of the Global Ocean Observing System. The Arctic presents distinct needs and challenges, demanding novel observing strategies. Cost, traceability and ability to integrate region-specific knowledge have to be balanced, in an approach that builds on existing and new observing infrastructure. ARCGOOS should benefit from established data infrastructures following the Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reuseable Principles to ensure preservation and sharing of data and derived products. Linking to the Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks (SAON) process and involving Arctic stakeholders, for example through liaison with the International Arctic Science Committee (IASC), can help ensure success

    Transplantation of Opioid-Producing Cells

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    Sources of Opioid-Producing CellsAdrenal MedullaChromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla produce and secrete a variety of neuroactive substances in addition to the traditionally recognized catecholamines. Most notably, these cells are a rich source of neuropeptides and neurotrophic factors (see Carmichael and Stoddard, 1993, and Unsicker, 1993, for reviews). Although several of these latter agents may be useful in pain control, the adrenal medulla has been well characterized as a rich source of opioid peptides (Viveros et al., 1979; Hexum et al., 1980; Lewis et al., 1980; Yang et al., 1980; Kilpatrick et al., 1982). These are primarily derived from the proenkephalin A precursor; thus, the active peptides are predominantly those of the enkephalin-containing family. In bovine adrenal gland, proenkephalin mRNA levels are 20–400 times higher than in the brain (Pittius et al., 1985). Levels of opioid peptide production in the adrenal medulla is species dependent to some extent, with high levels found in bovine, porcine, and canine glands and lower levels in rodents (Hexum et al., 1980; Yang et al., 1980). However, both proenkephalin mRNA and opioid peptide levels increase in the rat adrenal with denervation and with time in tissue culture, suggesting that environmental factors have a strong influence on opioid peptide production (Kilpatrick et al., 1984; Zhu et al., 1992).In contrast to the CNS, where proenkephalin is processed nearly completely to the pentapeptides, Met5-enkephalin and Leu5-enkephalin, the adrenal medulla in addition processes this precursor to several small, intermediate, and larger peptides that may contain single or multiple encrypted pentapeptide sequences (Lewis et al., 1980; Stern et al., 1980; Liston et al., 1984; Wilson, 1991)
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