OBJECTIVE:To explore the mechanisms of dorsal root ganglia and spinal microglia cascade cross in electroacupuncture(EA)analgesia in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation.METHODS:A rat model of lumbar disc herniation...OBJECTIVE:To explore the mechanisms of dorsal root ganglia and spinal microglia cascade cross in electroacupuncture(EA)analgesia in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation.METHODS:A rat model of lumbar disc herniation(LDH)was established,EA was administered at Huantiao(GB30)acupoint 30 min once a day,for 3 d.Before and after modeling,and after EA,mechanical allodynia thresholds were detected.Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated 2(HCN2)in dorsal root ganglia was detected by quantitative polymerase chain reaction(qPCR)and Western blot.C-X3-C motif chemokine ligand 1(CX3CL1)and activity of microglia in spinal cord was observed separately via qPCR and immunofluorescence staining.RESULTS:The mechanical allodynia threshold of the right planta of model rats was significantly reduced(P<0.01),EA increased the mechanical pain threshold of rats(P<0.01),and decreased HCN2 mRNA,and protein expression,reduced the expression of CX3CL1 and the activation of microglia.ZD7288(a blocker of HCN channel)reduced the analgesic effect of EA from 1.83±0.84 to 0.74±0.20(P<0.05),and the expression of CX3CL1 in the spinal cord decreased from 0.52±0.11 to 0.15±0.05(P<0.01).CONCLUSION:EA analgesia on the radicular pain of LDH is definite.EA reduced the expression of HCN2 channel in the dorsal root ganglion,thereby decreasing the noxious stimulation entered to microglia in spinal dorsal horn.Our work supports EA is an effective treatment for radicular pain of LDH.展开更多
The lack of truly robust analgesics for chronic pain is owed,in part,to the lack of an animal model that reflects the clinical pain state and of a mechanismbased,objective neurological indicator of pain.The present st...The lack of truly robust analgesics for chronic pain is owed,in part,to the lack of an animal model that reflects the clinical pain state and of a mechanismbased,objective neurological indicator of pain.The present study examined stimulus-evo ked brain activation with functional magnetic resonance imaging in male and female cynomolgus macaques following unilateral L7 spinal nerve ligation and the effects of clinical analgesics pregabalin,duloxetine,and morphine on brain activation in these macaques.A modified straight leg raise test was used to assess pain severity in awake animals and to evo ke regional brain activation in anesthetized animals.The potential effects of clinical analgesics on both awake pain behavior and regional brain activation were examined.Following spinal nerve ligation,both male and female macaques showed significantly decreased ipsilateral straight leg raise thresholds,suggesting the presence of radicula rlike pain.Morphine treatment increased straight leg raise thresholds in both males and females whereas duloxetine and pregabalin did not.In male macaques,the ipsilateral straight leg raise activated contralateral insular and somatosensory cortex(Ins/SII),and thalamus.In female macaques,the ipsilateral leg raise activated cingulate cortex and contralateral insular and somatosensory cortex.Straight leg raises of the contralateral,unligated leg did not evoke brain activation.Morphine reduced activation in all brain regions in both male and female macaques.In males,neither pregabalin nor duloxetine decreased brain activation compared with vehicle treatment.In females,however,pregabalin and duloxetine decreased the activation of cingulate cortex compared with vehicle treatment.The current findings suggest a diffe rential activation of brain areas depending on sex following a peripheral nerve injury.Diffe rential brain activation observed in this study could underlie qualitative sexual dimorphism in clinical chronic pain perception and responses to analgesics.Future pain management approaches for neuropathic pain will need to consider potential sex differences in pain mechanism and treatment efficacy.展开更多
Lumbar synovial cysts are benign fluid collections thought to form in a background of facet joint degeneration, allowing for fluid to leak from the joint capsule and form cysts in the synovium. Although often asymptom...Lumbar synovial cysts are benign fluid collections thought to form in a background of facet joint degeneration, allowing for fluid to leak from the joint capsule and form cysts in the synovium. Although often asymptomatic, patients with symptomatic synovial cysts will present with low back pain and possibly an associated radiculopathy. Clinicians can consider conservative management, epidural steroid injection, surgical intervention, or facet joint block with aspiration and rupture. This case describes a 59-year-old male facilities manager with intermittent low back pain for one year with worsening right-sided radicular symptoms secondary to a lumbar facet joint synovial cyst in the context of severe facet arthropathy and microinstability. The patient’s low back pain and radicular symptoms were refractory to conservative treatment. Imaging demonstrated a lumbar synovial cyst and subsequent management included transforaminal epidural steroid injection and facet joint block with cyst aspiration and rupture. The patient’s radicular pain resolved but axial lumbar pain returned after 3 weeks of relief. Follow-up imaging demonstrated decreased cyst size with fluid accumulation and joint space widening. Although the cyst was successfully decompressed with resolution of radicular pain, the underlying facet arthropathy remains contributing to persistent axial low back pain and potential for continued degenerative changes including cyst recurrence.展开更多
Background: Deep gluteal syndrome is a common cause of posterior hip pain. It results from peripheral nerves, such as the sciatic or superior gluteal nerve, being compressed in the deep gluteal space. Hydrodissection ...Background: Deep gluteal syndrome is a common cause of posterior hip pain. It results from peripheral nerves, such as the sciatic or superior gluteal nerve, being compressed in the deep gluteal space. Hydrodissection is a novel technique for the treatment of nerve pain due to entrapment. The use of hydrodissection for the treatment of deep gluteal syndrome has not been reported. Methods: A case report involved a 42-year-old female presenting with deep gluteal syndrome. Case report: We report, with patient consent, an ultrasound-guided superior gluteal nerve hydrodissection method used for treating the deep gluteal syndrome. A previously healthy 42-year-old female patient sought medical attention due to persistent left gluteal pain. Trials of joint injections, physiotherapy, and epidural blocks were unsuccessful. Hydrodissection under ultrasound-guidance allowed separation of the fascial plane in areas with significant neural innervation. We targeted the superior gluteal nerve with hydrodissection offering the patient immediate and persistent relief from her symptoms. Conclusion: Ultrasound-guided hydrodissection of the superior gluteal nerve offers an effective and novel diagnostic and treatment option for deep gluteal syndrome.展开更多
Objective: Epidural steroid injections (ESI) are used extensively to treat radicular back pain. This study is designed to evaluate the types and dosages of steroids commonly used and understand prescribing habits of t...Objective: Epidural steroid injections (ESI) are used extensively to treat radicular back pain. This study is designed to evaluate the types and dosages of steroids commonly used and understand prescribing habits of the Texas Pain Society pain management physicians. Method: From April to May 2014, we sent all 270 Texas Pain Society members a questionnaire to complete online. We collected 45 responses. Result: Type of steroid commonly used in injectate: Eighteen (41.9%) phy-sicians reported using methylprednisolone most. Fifteen (34.9%) physicians use triamcinolone, 9 (20.9%) physicians use dexamethasone, 1 (2.3%) uses betamethasone, and 2 skipped this question. Important factors influencing the type of steroid use in injectate: Half of the physicians reported that the location of the ESI was most important (19 responses, 48.7%). Ten (25.6%) reported that the approach of the ESI was most important. Another ten (25.6%) agreed that the potency of the steroid was most important. Dosage of steroid used in injectate: About half of the physicians use a fixed dose of steroid (22, 51.2%) while 21 (48.8%) use a variable dose of steroid. Of those who use a fixed dose of steroid, many use methylprednisolone 80 mg (9, 39.1%). Of those who use a variable dosage of steroid, the most important factor in their determination of the dosage is the patient’s comorbidities (20 responses, 58.8%). The use of depo-steroid in injectate: Thirty-two out of 43 (74.4%) use depo-steroid while 11 out of 43 (25.6%) wouldn’t use depo-steroid. Of those who use depo-steroid, the duration and availability in the epidural space is the most common reason for its use (23, 76.7%). Conclusion: By using a simple questionnaire detailing what types and dosages of steroids are used, compiling a list of best practices can help Texas Pain Society physicians tremendously in the treatment of radicular back pain.展开更多
基金Supported by Inheritance and Innovation in TCM“Hundred-Thousand-Ten Thousand”Talent Project(Qinhuang Project)(No.F119090038)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Based on the Cascade Reaction of Microglia-Astrocyte research exosomal mi RNA mechanisms of the inhibitory transition from acute to chronic pain of LDH by electroacupuncture,No.82074529)Scientific Research Projects of Traditional Chinese Medicine Bureau of Guangdong Province(Based on the cAMP-PKA-HCN2 pathway the mechanism of electro-acupuncture to prevent the development of pain in lumbar disc herniation,No.20211254)
文摘OBJECTIVE:To explore the mechanisms of dorsal root ganglia and spinal microglia cascade cross in electroacupuncture(EA)analgesia in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation.METHODS:A rat model of lumbar disc herniation(LDH)was established,EA was administered at Huantiao(GB30)acupoint 30 min once a day,for 3 d.Before and after modeling,and after EA,mechanical allodynia thresholds were detected.Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated 2(HCN2)in dorsal root ganglia was detected by quantitative polymerase chain reaction(qPCR)and Western blot.C-X3-C motif chemokine ligand 1(CX3CL1)and activity of microglia in spinal cord was observed separately via qPCR and immunofluorescence staining.RESULTS:The mechanical allodynia threshold of the right planta of model rats was significantly reduced(P<0.01),EA increased the mechanical pain threshold of rats(P<0.01),and decreased HCN2 mRNA,and protein expression,reduced the expression of CX3CL1 and the activation of microglia.ZD7288(a blocker of HCN channel)reduced the analgesic effect of EA from 1.83±0.84 to 0.74±0.20(P<0.05),and the expression of CX3CL1 in the spinal cord decreased from 0.52±0.11 to 0.15±0.05(P<0.01).CONCLUSION:EA analgesia on the radicular pain of LDH is definite.EA reduced the expression of HCN2 channel in the dorsal root ganglion,thereby decreasing the noxious stimulation entered to microglia in spinal dorsal horn.Our work supports EA is an effective treatment for radicular pain of LDH.
文摘The lack of truly robust analgesics for chronic pain is owed,in part,to the lack of an animal model that reflects the clinical pain state and of a mechanismbased,objective neurological indicator of pain.The present study examined stimulus-evo ked brain activation with functional magnetic resonance imaging in male and female cynomolgus macaques following unilateral L7 spinal nerve ligation and the effects of clinical analgesics pregabalin,duloxetine,and morphine on brain activation in these macaques.A modified straight leg raise test was used to assess pain severity in awake animals and to evo ke regional brain activation in anesthetized animals.The potential effects of clinical analgesics on both awake pain behavior and regional brain activation were examined.Following spinal nerve ligation,both male and female macaques showed significantly decreased ipsilateral straight leg raise thresholds,suggesting the presence of radicula rlike pain.Morphine treatment increased straight leg raise thresholds in both males and females whereas duloxetine and pregabalin did not.In male macaques,the ipsilateral straight leg raise activated contralateral insular and somatosensory cortex(Ins/SII),and thalamus.In female macaques,the ipsilateral leg raise activated cingulate cortex and contralateral insular and somatosensory cortex.Straight leg raises of the contralateral,unligated leg did not evoke brain activation.Morphine reduced activation in all brain regions in both male and female macaques.In males,neither pregabalin nor duloxetine decreased brain activation compared with vehicle treatment.In females,however,pregabalin and duloxetine decreased the activation of cingulate cortex compared with vehicle treatment.The current findings suggest a diffe rential activation of brain areas depending on sex following a peripheral nerve injury.Diffe rential brain activation observed in this study could underlie qualitative sexual dimorphism in clinical chronic pain perception and responses to analgesics.Future pain management approaches for neuropathic pain will need to consider potential sex differences in pain mechanism and treatment efficacy.
文摘Lumbar synovial cysts are benign fluid collections thought to form in a background of facet joint degeneration, allowing for fluid to leak from the joint capsule and form cysts in the synovium. Although often asymptomatic, patients with symptomatic synovial cysts will present with low back pain and possibly an associated radiculopathy. Clinicians can consider conservative management, epidural steroid injection, surgical intervention, or facet joint block with aspiration and rupture. This case describes a 59-year-old male facilities manager with intermittent low back pain for one year with worsening right-sided radicular symptoms secondary to a lumbar facet joint synovial cyst in the context of severe facet arthropathy and microinstability. The patient’s low back pain and radicular symptoms were refractory to conservative treatment. Imaging demonstrated a lumbar synovial cyst and subsequent management included transforaminal epidural steroid injection and facet joint block with cyst aspiration and rupture. The patient’s radicular pain resolved but axial lumbar pain returned after 3 weeks of relief. Follow-up imaging demonstrated decreased cyst size with fluid accumulation and joint space widening. Although the cyst was successfully decompressed with resolution of radicular pain, the underlying facet arthropathy remains contributing to persistent axial low back pain and potential for continued degenerative changes including cyst recurrence.
文摘Background: Deep gluteal syndrome is a common cause of posterior hip pain. It results from peripheral nerves, such as the sciatic or superior gluteal nerve, being compressed in the deep gluteal space. Hydrodissection is a novel technique for the treatment of nerve pain due to entrapment. The use of hydrodissection for the treatment of deep gluteal syndrome has not been reported. Methods: A case report involved a 42-year-old female presenting with deep gluteal syndrome. Case report: We report, with patient consent, an ultrasound-guided superior gluteal nerve hydrodissection method used for treating the deep gluteal syndrome. A previously healthy 42-year-old female patient sought medical attention due to persistent left gluteal pain. Trials of joint injections, physiotherapy, and epidural blocks were unsuccessful. Hydrodissection under ultrasound-guidance allowed separation of the fascial plane in areas with significant neural innervation. We targeted the superior gluteal nerve with hydrodissection offering the patient immediate and persistent relief from her symptoms. Conclusion: Ultrasound-guided hydrodissection of the superior gluteal nerve offers an effective and novel diagnostic and treatment option for deep gluteal syndrome.
文摘Objective: Epidural steroid injections (ESI) are used extensively to treat radicular back pain. This study is designed to evaluate the types and dosages of steroids commonly used and understand prescribing habits of the Texas Pain Society pain management physicians. Method: From April to May 2014, we sent all 270 Texas Pain Society members a questionnaire to complete online. We collected 45 responses. Result: Type of steroid commonly used in injectate: Eighteen (41.9%) phy-sicians reported using methylprednisolone most. Fifteen (34.9%) physicians use triamcinolone, 9 (20.9%) physicians use dexamethasone, 1 (2.3%) uses betamethasone, and 2 skipped this question. Important factors influencing the type of steroid use in injectate: Half of the physicians reported that the location of the ESI was most important (19 responses, 48.7%). Ten (25.6%) reported that the approach of the ESI was most important. Another ten (25.6%) agreed that the potency of the steroid was most important. Dosage of steroid used in injectate: About half of the physicians use a fixed dose of steroid (22, 51.2%) while 21 (48.8%) use a variable dose of steroid. Of those who use a fixed dose of steroid, many use methylprednisolone 80 mg (9, 39.1%). Of those who use a variable dosage of steroid, the most important factor in their determination of the dosage is the patient’s comorbidities (20 responses, 58.8%). The use of depo-steroid in injectate: Thirty-two out of 43 (74.4%) use depo-steroid while 11 out of 43 (25.6%) wouldn’t use depo-steroid. Of those who use depo-steroid, the duration and availability in the epidural space is the most common reason for its use (23, 76.7%). Conclusion: By using a simple questionnaire detailing what types and dosages of steroids are used, compiling a list of best practices can help Texas Pain Society physicians tremendously in the treatment of radicular back pain.