• Pain relief without side effects with pr

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Oct 13 21:30:40 2021
    Pain relief without side effects with promising technique

    Date:
    October 13, 2021
    Source:
    Lund University
    Summary:
    Researchers have developed a completely new stimulation method,
    using ultra-thin microelectrodes, to combat severe pain. This
    provides effective and personalized pain relief without the common
    side effects from pain relief drugs.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have developed a completely
    new stimulation method, using ultra-thin microelectrodes, to combat
    severe pain.

    This provides effective and personalised pain relief without the common
    side effects from pain relief drugs. The study, which was conducted on
    rats, has been published in the research journal Science Advances.


    ==========================================================================
    The lack of a side effect-free treatment for long-term pain often
    considerably impairs the quality of life of the patients affected. Without analgesic treatment, the persistent pain makes it difficult for the
    patient to function in everyday life. Traditional pain-relieving treatment certainly reduces the pain, but at the same time affects the senses
    and mental function, and there is a considerable risk of developing a
    drug addiction.

    Pain also entails a considerable cost for society in the form of sick
    leave, healthcare costs and lost production. According to a recent
    American report (https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/67/wr/mm6736a2.htm)
    about eight per cent of the American population suffer from high-impact
    chronic pain.

    In Lund, a research team led by professor of neurophysiology Jens
    Schouenborg developed a method to combat pain via personalised stimulation using ultra- thin, tissue-friendly microelectrodes.

    "The electrodes are very soft and extremely gentle on the brain. They
    are used to specifically activate the brain's pain control centres
    without simultaneously activating the nerve cell circuits that produce
    side effects.

    The method involves implanting a cluster of the ultra-thin electrodes
    and then selecting a sub-group of the electrodes that provide pure pain
    relief, but no side effects. This procedure enables extremely precise
    and personalised stimulation treatment that was shown to work for every individual," explains Jens Schouenborg.

    The pain is blocked by activating the brain's pain control centres,
    and these in turn block only the signal transfer in the pain pathways
    to the cerebral cortex.



    ==========================================================================
    "We have achieved an almost total blockade of pain without affecting
    any other sensory system or motor skill, which is a major breakthrough
    in pain research.

    Our results show that it is actually possible to develop powerful and
    side effect-free pain relief, something that has been a major challenge
    up to now," explains Matilde Forni, doctoral student and first author
    of the new pain study.

    During the project, which has been running for several years, the
    researchers developed a tissue-friendly, gelatine-based technology
    and surgical techniques that made it possible to implant the flexible microelectrodes with very high precision. According to the researchers,
    the new technique should work on all sorts of pain that are conveyed by
    the spinal cord, i.e. most types of pain.

    The most common form of pain relief today is through the use of drugs.

    "In our study we also compared our method with morphine, which was shown
    to deliver considerably less pain relief. In addition, of course, morphine
    has a powerful sedative effect as well as other cognitive effects. In the
    study we could also show that pain after sensitisation (hyperalgesia),
    which is common in chronic pain, was blocked," says Jens Schouenborg.

    The study in Lund was conducted on rats. Could the results be transferable
    to humans? "That is the aim. The human brain has similar control systems
    to the rat's and our electrode designs can be scaled up for humans,"
    says Matilde Forni.

    The researchers hope that within five to eight years the method will lead
    to satisfactory stimulation treatment of people with particularly severe
    pain, such as cancer pain or chronic pain in connection with spinal cord injuries, for which no satisfactory pain treatment is available today.

    The researchers also consider that the method could be used in a broader
    way to treat conditions besides pain.

    "In principle, the method can be tailored to all parts of the brain, so
    we believe that it could also be used in the treatment of degenerative
    brain diseases such as Parkinson's disease as well as in depression,
    epilepsy and probably stroke as well. The electrode technique also
    has applications in diagnostics and not least in research on how the
    mysterious brain works," says Jens Schouenborg.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Lund_University. Note: Content may
    be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Matilde Forni, Palmi Thor Thorbergsson, Jonas Thelin and Jens
    Schouenborg. 3D microelectrode cluster and stimulation paradigm
    yield powerful analgesia without noticeable adverse effects. Science
    Advances, 2021 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj2847 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/10/211013104622.htm

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