Neurotoxin in cigarette smoke worsens pain in spinal cord injuries – Medical Xpress

Posted: Published on June 15th, 2017

This post was added by Dr Simmons

June 15, 2017 by Emil Venere People with spinal cord injuries may suffer neuropathic pain in various parts of the body. Credit: Purdue University photo/Michel Schweinsberg

Researchers have identified a key component in cigarette smoke that worsens pain in people with spinal cord injury, suggesting that a critical element within tobacco is responsible for such pain-inducing effects.

"Findings support anecdotal information suggesting that smoking increases pain in patients with spinal cord injuries," said Riyi Shi (pronounced Ree Shee), a professor of neuroscience and biomedical engineering in Purdue University's Department of Basic Medical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine and Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering. "This neuropathic pain could be felt in the leg and upper extremities, or in any part of the body."

A toxin from cigarette smoke has been shown to cause pain in animals with spinal cord injuries. The same toxin is known to activate pain sensors in nerve fibers.

The research showed that a neurotoxin called acrolein contained in cigarette smoke intensified neuropathic pain after spinal cord injuries in rats. Acrolein is known to worsen pain by activating and causing a proliferation of pain receptors called TRPA1, or transient receptor potential ankyrin-1, found in nerve fibers.

The findings are detailed in a research paper appearing on Aug. 15 in the Journal of Neurological Sciences. The paper, published online May 22, was co-authored by Shi and graduate students Breanne Butler and Glen Acosta.

"Previously, it was reported that people with spinal cord injury-induced chronic neuropathic pain have experienced heightened pain sensitivity when smoking tobacco cigarettes, and less pain following the termination of smoking," Shi said. "However, the molecular mechanisms of smoke-induced hypersensitivity are not yet clear. We show in the current study not only that the inhalation of cigarette smoke can worsen the pain, but inhaling acrolein alone, apart from cigarette smoke, at a concentration similar to that emitted from cigarettes, can produce significant increases in pain-related behavior after spinal cord injury as well. Furthermore, the intensified pain behavior due to acrolein inhalation was reduced when an acrolein scavenger, phenelzine, was administered to the animals during acrolein exposure."

The study could open the door to a variety of possible preventive or therapeutic approaches to mitigate pain affecting the quality of life in spinal cord injury victims.

One of the principal impacts of the discovery is the possibility of reducing pain by using acrolein-scavenging drugs such as phenelzine, an anti-depressant approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Other potential FDA-approved anti-acrolein drugs including hydralazine, a medication for hypertension, and dimercarprol, an acute heavy metal poisoning treatment, have been tested and shown to be effective acrolein scavengers in Shi's lab. The drugs are thought to mitigate pain in active smokers, but also among those with pain caused by second-hand smoke for people with spinal cord injuries.

Acrolein also is produced by the body in response to spinal cord injury, and this natural source of the neurotoxin has been found to increase pain. However, the new research findings are the first showing that both acrolein introduced from an external source and cigarette smoke itself increases pain. A potential mechanism is that acrolein may increase pain by activating the TRPA1 receptors after spinal cord injury, as shown in some of Shi's previous work.

"The pain caused by cigarettes is noticeably more severe than acrolein alone, so there could be other compounds in cigarette smoke that also play a role," he said.

Explore further: New pain mechanisms revealed for neurotoxin in spinal cord injury

More information: Breanne Butler et al. Exogenous Acrolein intensifies sensory hypersensitivity after spinal cord injury in rat, Journal of the Neurological Sciences (2017). DOI: 10.1016/j.jns.2017.05.039

A toxin released by the body in response to spinal cord injuries increases pain by causing a proliferation of channels containing pain sensors, new research shows, and this hypersensitivity also extends to peripheral nerves ...

A neurotoxin called acrolein found in tobacco smoke that is thought to increase pain in people with spinal cord injury has now been shown to accumulate in mice exposed to the equivalent of 12 cigarettes daily over a short ...

(Medical Xpress)Researchers have discovered that a known neurotoxin may cause chronic pain in people who suffer from paralysis, and a drug that has been shown to remove the toxin might be used to treat the pain.

A drug developed during World War II as an antidote for a chemical warfare agent has been found to be effective at suppressing a neurotoxin that worsens the pain and severity of spinal cord injuries, suggesting a new tool ...

A Purdue startup is commercializing a technology that could reduce the symptoms and pain of neurological disease and injury, including multiple sclerosis, neuropathic pain and Parkinson's disease.

Researchers have identified a key component in cigarette smoke that worsens pain in people with spinal cord injury, suggesting that a critical element within tobacco is responsible for such pain-inducing effects.

The urge to satisfy hunger is a primal one, but - as any dieter knows - choices about when and what to eat can be influenced by cues in the environment, not just how long it's been since breakfast. The fact that food-associated ...

While the mechanism of transmission of information at the contact point between two neuronsthe famous synapsehas been thoroughly studied, the transportation of this information within the terminal end of the neuron, ...

Scientists working in connectomics, a research field occupied with the reconstruction of neuronal networks in the brain, are aiming at completely mapping of the millions or billions of neurons found in mammalian brains. In ...

Haute couture can be credited for enhancing more than catwalks and red carpets. New research from UC Berkeley suggests that the 3-D or "stereoscopic" vision of dressmakers is as sharp as their needles.

Brain-machine interfaces represent a solution for people with physical difficulties to communicate with their physical and social environment. In this work, researchers have identified a functional brain pattern in the prefrontal ...

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

And maybe THIS will be enough to get them to stop.

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

See original here:
Neurotoxin in cigarette smoke worsens pain in spinal cord injuries - Medical Xpress

Related Posts
This entry was posted in Spinal Cord Injury Treatment. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.