| Literature DB >> 30486810 |
Jiann-Her Lin1,2, Chih-Hsien Hung1,3,4, Der-Sheng Han5, Shih-Ting Chen1, Cheng-Han Lee1, Wei-Zen Sun6, Chih-Cheng Chen7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sensing tissue acidosis is an important function of the somatosensory nervous system to response to noxious stimuli. MAIN BODY: In the pain clinic, acid or soreness sensation is a characteristic sensory phenotype of various acute and chronic pain syndromes, such as delayed onset muscle soreness, fibromyalgia, and radicular pain. However, soreness sensation is a sign of successful analgesia for acupuncture and noxipoint therapy. Thus, the nature of acid or soreness sensation is not always nociceptive (or painful) and could be anti-nociceptive. To facilitate the investigation of the molecular and neurobiological mechanisms of soreness sensation, we propose a concept called "sngception (sng- ception)" to describe the response of the somatosensory nervous system to sense tissue acidosis and to distinguish it from nociception. "Sng" is a Taiwanese word that represents the state of soreness while at the same time imitates the natural vocalization of humans feeling sore.Entities:
Keywords: ASIC3; Acidosis; Nociception; Pain; Sngception; Soreness
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486810 PMCID: PMC6263053 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-018-0486-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Types of tissue acidosis and associated pain
| Conditions | Affected sites | Examples | pH ranges (in animal models) | Pain/soreness | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemia | Brain | Stroke | 6.2~ 7.0 (Rat) | Central post-stroke pain | [ |
| Brain | Intracranial hypertension | ~ 7.05 | Headache and widespread pain | [ | |
| Heart | Angina | 6.9~ 7.0 (Cat) | Chest pain | [ | |
| Intestine | Small bowel obstruction | 6.8~ 7.1 | Abdominal pain | [ | |
| Lower limbs | Peripheral artery disease | < 7.15 (Cat) | Pain | [ | |
| Muscle | Tourniquet test | ~ 7.0 | Muscle pain | [ | |
| Vessel | Sickle cell disease | < 7.36 | Sickle pain | [ | |
| Injury | Skin | Surgery | 6.9~ 7.1 (Rat) | Postoperative pain | [ |
| Muscle | Surgery | 6.5~ 7.1 (Rat) | Postoperative pain | [ | |
| Inflammation | Joint | Osteoarthritis | 6.9~ 7.4 (Rabbit) | Pain | [ |
| Joint | Rheumatoid arthritis | 7.1~ 7.4 | Pain | [ | |
| Skin | Skin wound | 7.0~ 7.3 (Rabbit) | Dermal pain | [ | |
| Blood | Sepsis | 7.2~ 7.3 | Pain/Soreness | [ | |
| Muscle | Flu | NA | Pain/soreness | [ | |
| Fatiguing exercise | Muscle | Delayed onset muscle soreness | 6.6~ 6.9 (Mouse) | Soreness | [ |
| Metabolism disorders | Blood | Diabetic ketoacidosis | ≤ 6.9 ~ 7.2 | Abdominal pain | [ |
| Blood | Renal tubular acidosis | ~ 7.2 | Widespread muscle & joint pain | [ | |
| Tumor | Bone | Bone cancer | 4.0~ 6.0 (Mouse) | Cancer pain | [ |
NA: not available
Fig. 1Molecular determinants that sense tissue acidosis. Proton-sensing ion channels and/or receptors expressed in nociceptors include members of acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs), transient receptor potential (TRP) channels, two-pore potassium channels (K2Ps), and protein-sensing G-protein-coupled receptors such as G2A, GRP4, OGR1, and TDAG8
The phenomena of pain and sng
| Pain | Sng | |
|---|---|---|
| Trigger | Tissue damage | Tissue acidosis; |
| Sensation | Nociception | Sngception |
| Perception | Pain | Soreness (or Sng) |
| Responses | Suffering | Suffering; relief by passive massage and/or active stretch |
| Behaviors | Avoiding | Dual manifestations: |
Fig. 2Soreness hypothesis. Tissue acidosis simultaneously evokes a pro-nociceptive signaling via ASIC3/TRPV1 activation and an anti-nociception via non-ASIC3, non-TRPV1 acid signaling. In most cases, pain associated with tissue acidosis is the balanced result of pro-nociceptive and anti-nociceptive acid signaling. In physical therapy, soreness sensation induced by acupuncture and/or noxipoint therapy is a sign of successful analgesia to balance the pro-nociceptive signaling. Fibromyalgia patients might have soreness phenotypes due to an imbalance of acid signaling in muscle nociceptors, especially with impaired non-ASIC3, non-TRPV1 acid signaling