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American doctors anticipate treatment for long-term pain

PHILADELPHIA (February 13, 1998 01:36 a.m. EST http://www.nando.net) - Relief
from agonizing chronic pain appears to be on the way for people who have had
serious injuries or who suffer from diseases such as cancer, researchers said
Thursday.

A Dartmouth Medical School study of laboratory rats found that neuropathic
pain, which is impervious to traditional painkillers, can be inhibited by
blocking the action of small bodily proteins called cytokines in the central
nervous system.

The study results were due to be presented formally Friday at the annual
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in
Philadelphia.

"We may be on the verge of a new pharmacopeia for preventing and treating
pain," said Joyce DeLeo, the Dartmouth professor of anesthesiology and
pharmacology, who led the study.

Neuropathic pain can afflict people who have been hurt in car crashes, had
surgery or suffer major chronic illnesses.

What has baffled scientists until now is that the burning or "shooting"
sensations of neuropathic pain can intensify after the healing process has
been completed.

Researchers say neuropathic pain is more common than Alzheimer's disease. In
more than half of all sufferers, the disorder manifests itself as chronic
lower back pain.

"This is very severe pain that can last for 10 years -- every day, all day
long and all night long," said Dr. Gary Bennett of Allegheny University. "You
don't get a vacation."

Research shows that cytokine protein cells, normally associated with the
body's immunity, are produced in the central nervous system in large numbers
as a consequence of peripheral nerve damage.

Opiates including morphine are ineffective against pain resulting from that
condition. But if cytokine activity were held in check by new treatments,
doctors say, traditional painkillers could then be used to control discomfort.

The new treatments can be expected within five years, possibly sooner.

Bennett said three drug families already have proven effective against
neuropathic pain in early human trials.

They are: the antiepilepsy drug gabopentin; an experimental class of
antiepilepsy drugs called N-Methyl-D-Aspartate receptor blockers; and
substances called conopeptides, which originate from the venom of poisonous
snails and have been synthesized by Neurex Corp. in the form of a drug called
SNX-111.

"Every major drug company in the world is working on NMDA receptor-blockers,"
Bennett said.

Studies of neuropathic pain suggest an underlying connection between the
body's immune and central nervous systems, which up to now have been thought
to operate independently.

Researchers have been able to reproduce hypersensitivity to temperature and
touch in rats by injuring a single nerve cell.

Scientists find that a persistent barrage of nerve signals from the site of
tissue or nerve damage can heighten the perception of pain and alter the way
the entire nervous system functions.

But DeLeo said further study of cytokines is necessary. "Cytokines are a
double-edged sword, with both beneficial and destructive actions," she said.

"To tailor effective treatments, we will need to learn more about the timing
and balance of these powerful immune proteins."

By DAVID MORGAN, Reuters
Copyright 1998 Nando.net
Copyright 1998 Reuters News Service

janet paterson
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