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Strong Feelings - Latest Findings on Pain Sensitivity The recent discovery of the amplification of even low levels of pain has prompted the organisation of an upcoming symposium in Vienna on "Risk Assessment in Pain Therapy". This international expert meeting will aim to optimise pain therapy by taking account of this previously unknown phenomenon. As a result the findings of an Austrian Science Fund FWF project, which were recently published in SCIENCE, may soon be benefiting patients who suffering severe chronic pain. Constant pain can really get on your nerves - literally! The phenomenon of pain sensitivity enhancement is responsible for this. In the case of persistent pain impulses, it brings about permanent changes in the neurons responsible for transmitting the pain signals. This leads to an increase in pain sensitivity and the sensation of pain can even persist long after the actual pain signals has faded out. Strong and Weak Now, a team under Prof. Jürgen Sandkühler of the Department of Neurophysiology at the Medical University of Vienna has published findings in the June 2006 edition of SCIENCE which explain the existence of pain amplification even at low levels of pain. Commenting on the research, Prof. Sandkühler said: "We were able to show in a controlled laboratory system that the amplification arises even when the pain is quite weak. We actually used electrical impulses that were 50 times weaker than those previously employed to induce this response. Weak pain signals like these are symptomatic of the healing of wounds and of inflammation." Prof. Sandkühler's group was also able to identify the cells responsible
for this previously unknown phenomenon. They are located in the lamina
I of the spinal dorsal horn, and ensure that signals from peripheral pain
fibres are transmitted to spinal nerve tracts leading to the brain. Illuminating Evidence These new findings are of fundamental importance for pain therapy. As Sandkühler put it: "Treating patients with pain killers for a short period of time after an operation, for example, is not an effective means of avoiding pain enhancement. Pain therapy must be continued without interruption until the pain has largely subsided." In order that these recommendations may be implemented quickly, Prof. Sandkühler is playing a part in organising an expert meeting on the topic. The "Risk Assessment in Pain Therapy" symposium will take place on 10th November 2006, with the aim of evaluating the opportunities and risks of current therapeutic procedures in the light of these new findings. In cooperation with IGOST (the Interdisciplinary Society for Orthopaedic Pain Therapy), Sandkühler has succeeded in attracting representatives of DGSS (the German Society for the Study of Pain), ÖSG (the Austrian Pain Society) and internationally renowned pain researchers to this event in Vienna. This should mean that the findings of this FWF project can soon feed through into specific recommendations for clinical therapy. Scientific Contact Austrian Science Fund FWF Copy Editing and Distribution
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Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Haus der Forschung, Sensengasse 1, 1090 Vienna T +43-1-505 67 40 F +43-1-505 67 39 office@fwf.ac.at - www.fwf.ac.at |
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