| Literature DB >> 22619712 |
Abstract
Visceral pain is experienced by 40% of the population, and 28% of cancer patients suffer from pain arising from intra- abdominal metastasis or from treatment. Neuroanatomy of visceral nociception and neurotransmitters, receptors, and ion channels that modulate visceral pain are qualitatively or quantitatively different from those that modulate somatic and neuropathic pain. Visceral pain should be recognized as distinct pain phenotype. TRPV1, Na 1.8, and ASIC3 ion channels and peripheral kappa opioid receptors are important mediators of visceral pain. Mu agonists, gabapentinoids, and GABAB agonists reduce pain by binding to central receptors and channels. Combinations of analgesics and adjuvants in animal models have supra-additive antinociception and should be considered in clinical trials. This paper will discuss the neuroanatomy, receptors, ion channels, and neurotransmitters important to visceral pain and provide a basic science rationale for analgesic trials and management.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22619712 PMCID: PMC3348642 DOI: 10.1155/2012/265605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1542
Distinctive features of visceral spinal afferents relative to somatic.
| (1) | Dual extrinsic afferent system |
| (2) | Convergence of afferents on somatic and other visceral afferents within the spinal cord |
| (3) | Widely overlapping receptive fields |
| (4) | Dichotomization of fibers where a single neuron innervates two viscera |
| (5) | Collateral activation of autonomic and enteric nervous system |
| (6) | Larger cell bodies within dorsal root ganglia |
| (7) | Wide overlapping receptor fields |
| (8) | Lack of specialized nerve terminals |
| (9) | First-order afferents arborize over several spinal segments |
| (10) | Greater expression of transient receptor potential (TRPV1), sodium (Na 1.8), acid (ASIC3) ion channels, and calcitonin gene-related protein (CGRP) |
| (11) | Limited number of stimulus responses (distension, ischemia, and inflammation) |
| (12) | More discrete location of first-order terminals within the spinal cord (superficial dorsal horn, lamina V, and central) |
| (13) | Afferents ascend with parasympathetic and sympathetic neuronal projections |
| (14) | Viscerovisceral hyperalgesia and hypersensitivity |
| (15) | Visceromotor responses and referred pain to somatic sites innervated by the samespinal cord level |
| (16) | Second-order afferents ascend in the dorsal column |
| (17) | Nonsomatotopically arranged input in dorsal column and central lateral thalamus unlike the lateral spinothalamics |
| (18) | Poor representation in S1 cortex |
| (19) | Greater emotional and autonomic responses to pain than somatic pain |