Off switch to pain discovered

#1
Magical Realist Offline
"In research published in the medical journal Brain, Saint Louis University researcher Daniela Salvemini, Ph.D. and colleagues within SLU, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other academic institutions have discovered a way to block a pain pathway in animal models of chronic neuropathic pain including pain caused by chemotherapeutic agents and bone cancer pain suggesting a promising new approach to pain relief.

The scientific efforts led by Salvemini, who is professor of pharmacological and physiological sciences at SLU, demonstrated that turning on a receptor in the brain and spinal cord counteracts chronic nerve pain in male and female rodents. Activating the A3 receptor -- either by its native chemical stimulator, the small molecule adenosine, or by powerful synthetic small molecule drugs invented at the NIH -- prevents or reverses pain that develops slowly from nerve damage without causing analgesic tolerance or intrinsic reward (unlike opioids).

An Unmet Medical Need

Pain is an enormous problem. As an unmet medical need, pain causes suffering and comes with a multi-billion dollar societal cost. Current treatments are problematic because they cause intolerable side effects, diminish quality of life and do not sufficiently quell pain.

The most successful pharmacological approaches for the treatment of chronic pain rely on certain "pathways": circuits involving opioid, adrenergic, and calcium channels.

For the past decade, scientists have tried to take advantage of these known pathways -- the series of interactions between molecular-level components that lead to pain. While adenosine had shown potential for pain-killing in humans, researchers had not yet successfully leveraged this particular pain pathway because the targeted receptors engaged many side effects.

A Key to Pain Relief

In this research, Salvemini and colleagues have demonstrated that activation of the A3 adenosine receptor subtype is key in mediating the pain relieving effects of adenosine.

"It has long been appreciated that harnessing the potent pain-killing effects of adenosine could provide a breakthrough step towards an effective treatment for chronic pain," Salvemini said. "Our findings suggest that this goal may be achieved by focusing future work on the A3AR pathway, in particular, as its activation provides robust pain reduction across several types of pain."

Researchers are excited to note that A3AR agonists are already in advanced clinical trials as anti-inflammatory and anticancer agents and show good safety profiles. "These studies suggest that A3AR activation by highly selective small molecular weight A3AR agonists such as MRS5698 activates a pain-reducing pathway supporting the idea that we could develop A3AR agonists as possible new therapeutics to treat chronic pain," Salvemini said."==https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20...132639.htm
Reply
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Article Fish feel pain for 20 minutes after catch — so why are we letting them suffocate? C C 0 384 Jun 12, 2025 06:41 PM
Last Post: C C
  Research Women often told that severity of medical abortion pain no worse than period cramps C C 0 494 Dec 18, 2024 06:31 AM
Last Post: C C
  An implantable ice pack tries to relieve pain without opioids C C 0 347 Aug 8, 2022 09:03 PM
Last Post: C C
  How painkillers kill pain + Many drugs can’t survive stomach acid – new delivery m... C C 0 337 Jul 11, 2022 05:11 PM
Last Post: C C
  Men and women process pain signals differently C C 1 418 Mar 24, 2022 02:42 PM
Last Post: Kornee
  What explains our lower back pain? Anthropologists turn to Neandertals for answers C C 0 325 Mar 3, 2022 06:03 PM
Last Post: C C
  Sugar pills relieve back pain as good as regular pain pills Magical Realist 2 970 Sep 21, 2018 12:33 AM
Last Post: confused2
  New cure for baldness discovered in Great Britain Magical Realist 0 822 May 10, 2018 05:49 PM
Last Post: Magical Realist
  New solution to chronic pain Magical Realist 2 1,003 Mar 13, 2018 11:16 PM
Last Post: Yazata
  Safer opioid drugs could treat pain and save lives C C 1 978 Dec 6, 2017 11:53 AM
Last Post: RainbowUnicorn



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)