| Literature DB >> 34182187 |
Joana Barroso1, Paulo Branco2, Apkar Vania Apkarian3.
Abstract
Chronic pain is a leading cause of disability worldwide and its prevalence is likely to increase over the next decades. Treatment for chronic pain remains insufficient and therapeutical advances have not made comparable progress with that for many chronic disorders, thus amplifying the concern on the future burden of the disease. At the same time, and even after decades of intense research, the underlying pathophysiology of chronic pain remains minimally understood. We believe advancing our current understanding of chronic pain requires mechanistically explicit, hypothesis-driven, and clinically focused models. In this review we highlight some of the main findings over the last decades that have contributed to the present knowledge of brain mechanisms of chronic pain, and how such advances were possible due to a reverse translational research approach. We argue that this approach is essential in the chronic pain field, in order to generate new scientific hypotheses, probe physiological mechanisms, develop therapeutic strategies and translate findings back into promising human clinical trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34182187 PMCID: PMC8572168 DOI: 10.1016/j.trsl.2021.06.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Res ISSN: 1878-1810 Impact factor: 7.012