학술논문

Independent contributions of alcohol and stress axis hormones to painful peripheral neuropathy
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Chronic Pain
Neurodegenerative
Pain Research
Peripheral Neuropathy
Substance Misuse
Alcoholism
Alcohol Use and Health
Behavioral and Social Science
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Prevention
Mental Health
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Good Health and Well Being
Acoustic Stimulation
Adrenal Medulla
Alcoholic Neuropathy
Animals
Catecholamines
Ethanol
Glucocorticoids
Male
Neuralgia
Pain Threshold
Peripheral Nervous System Diseases
Rats
Rats
Sprague-Dawley
Stress
Psychological
hyperalgesia
nociceptor
painful peripheral neuropathy
alcohol neurotoxicity
stress hormones
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
Painful small-fiber peripheral neuropathy is a debilitating complication of chronic alcohol abuse. Evidence from previous studies suggests that neuroendocrine mechanisms, in combination with other, as yet unidentified actions of alcohol, are required to produce this neuropathic pain syndrome. In addition to neurotoxic effects of alcohol, in the setting of alcohol abuse neuroendocrine stress axes release glucocorticoids and catecholamines. Since receptors for these stress hormones are located on nociceptors, at which they can act to cause neuronal dysfunction, we tested the hypothesis that alcohol and stress hormones act on the nociceptor, independently, to produce neuropathic pain. We used a rat model, which allows the distinction of the effects of alcohol from those produced by neuroendocrine stress axis mediators. We now demonstrate that topical application of alcohol and exposure to unpredictable sound stress, each alone, has no effect on the nociceptive threshold. However, when animals that had previous exposure to alcohol were subsequently exposed to stress, they rapidly developed mechanical hyperalgesia. Conversely, sound stress followed by topical alcohol exposure also produced mechanical hyperalgesia. The contribution of stress hormones was prevented by spinal intrathecal administration of oligodeoxynucleotides antisense to β(2)-adrenergic or glucocorticoid receptor mRNA, which attenuates receptor level in nociceptors, as well as by adrenal medullectomy. These experiments establish an independent role of alcohol and stress hormones on the primary afferent nociceptor in the induction of painful peripheral neuropathy.