Sperry Megan M, Ita Meagan E, Kartha Sonia, Zhang Sijia, Yu Ya-Hsin, Winkelstein Beth
Department of Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania, 240 Skirkanich Hall, 210 S. 33rd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6321 e-mail:
Department of Endodontics, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 240 Skirkanich Hall, 210 S. 33rd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6321 e-mail:
J Biomech Eng. 2017 Feb 1;139(2):0210031-02100313. doi: 10.1115/1.4035647.
Chronic joint pain is a widespread problem that frequently occurs with aging and trauma. Pain occurs most often in synovial joints, the body's load bearing joints. The mechanical and molecular mechanisms contributing to synovial joint pain are reviewed using two examples, the cervical spinal facet joints and the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). Although much work has focused on the macroscale mechanics of joints in health and disease, the combined influence of tissue mechanics, molecular processes, and nociception in joint pain has only recently become a focus. Trauma and repeated loading can induce structural and biochemical changes in joints, altering their microenvironment and modifying the biomechanics of their constitutive tissues, which themselves are innervated. Peripheral pain sensors can become activated in response to changes in the joint microenvironment and relay pain signals to the spinal cord and brain where pain is processed and perceived. In some cases, pain circuitry is permanently changed, which may be a potential mechanism for sustained joint pain. However, it is most likely that alterations in both the joint microenvironment and the central nervous system (CNS) contribute to chronic pain. As such, the challenge of treating joint pain and degeneration is temporally and spatially complicated. This review summarizes anatomy, physiology, and pathophysiology of these joints and the sensory pain relays. Pain pathways are postulated to be sensitized by many factors, including degeneration and biochemical priming, with effects on thresholds for mechanical injury and/or dysfunction. Initiators of joint pain are discussed in the context of clinical challenges including the diagnosis and treatment of pain.
慢性关节疼痛是一个普遍存在的问题,常随着衰老和创伤而出现。疼痛最常发生在滑膜关节,即人体的承重关节。本文以颈椎小关节和颞下颌关节(TMJ)为例,综述了导致滑膜关节疼痛的力学和分子机制。尽管许多研究聚焦于健康和疾病状态下关节的宏观力学,但组织力学、分子过程和伤害感受在关节疼痛中的综合影响直到最近才成为研究重点。创伤和反复负荷可诱发关节的结构和生化变化,改变其微环境并改变其组成组织的生物力学,而这些组织本身是有神经支配的。外周疼痛感受器可因关节微环境的变化而被激活,并将疼痛信号传递至脊髓和大脑进行疼痛处理和感知。在某些情况下,疼痛传导通路会永久性改变,这可能是持续性关节疼痛的潜在机制。然而,关节微环境和中枢神经系统(CNS)的改变很可能都导致了慢性疼痛。因此,治疗关节疼痛和退变的挑战在时间和空间上都很复杂。本文综述了这些关节的解剖学、生理学和病理生理学以及感觉性疼痛传导。推测疼痛通路会因许多因素而敏感化,包括退变和生化启动,这些因素会影响机械性损伤和/或功能障碍的阈值。本文在包括疼痛诊断和治疗在内的临床挑战背景下讨论了关节疼痛的引发因素。