
How Stress Alleviates Pain
ScienceDaily (Dec. 6, 2007) — One
way to alleviate the pain of banging your shin while on a hike is to encounter
a grizzly bear--a well-known phenomenon called stress-induced analgesia. Now,
researchers have elucidated a key mechanism by which the stress hormone
noradrenaline -- which floods the bloodstream during grizzly encounters and
other stressful events -- affects the brain's pain-processing pathway to
produce such analgesia.
In their experiments, Sah and colleagues studied a region of the amygdala,
the brain's emotion-processing region known to mediate the emotional and
stress-related aspects of pain. Researchers had long known that these amygdala-based
processes were controlled by neurons that originated in the brainstem and that
were regulated by noradrenaline.
Sah and colleagues sought in their studies to understand the mechanism by
which noradrenaline influences neuronal transmission of pain inputs from the
brainstem region known as the pontine parabrachial (PB).
In their experiments with rats, the researchers analyzed the effects of
noradrenaline on electrical stimulation of the pathway between the PB and
amygdala. They found that noradrenaline acted as a powerful suppressor of that
stimulation. The researchers' studies also revealed that noradrenaline
suppression acted on the "transmission" side of the connections
between neurons, called synapses. Their analyses revealed how noradrenaline
causes such suppression: by activating specific receptors, called
adrenocreceptors, on the PB neurons.
The researchers' studies showed that noradrenaline's action appears to reduce
the number of sites that launch the chemical signals called neurotransmitters by
which one neuron triggers a nerve impulse in another, reported the researchers.
They concluded that "Our results show that an important mediator of
stress-induced analgesia could be the potent modulation by noradrenaline of
[pain] PB inputs in the central amygdala."
In an accompanying perspective article on the research, Harvard Medical
School researchers Keith Tully, Yan Li, and Vadim Bolshakov wrote that "The
impressive new study... provides important mechanistic clues helping to explain
this phenomenon."
Pankaj Sah and colleagues published their findings in the December 6, 2007,
issue of the journal Neuron, published by Cell Press.
The researchers include Andrew J. Delaney, James W. Crane, and Pankaj Sah, of
the Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, Australia.
Adapted from materials provided by Cell
Press.
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