Kissiwaa Sarah A, Bagley Elena E
Discipline of Pharmacology and Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
J Physiol. 2018 Jul 13;596(18):4457-73. doi: 10.1113/JP273976.
Chronic pain is disabling because sufferers form negative associations between pain and activities, such as work, leading to the sufferer limiting these activities. Pain information arriving in the amygdala is responsible for forming these associations and contributes to us feeling bad when we are in pain. Ongoing injuries enhance the delivery of pain information to the amygdala. If we want to understand why chronic pain can continue without ongoing injury, it is important to know whether this facilitation continues once the injury has healed. In the present study, we show that a 2 min noxious heat stimulus, without ongoing injury, is able to enhance delivery of pain information to the amygdala for 3 days. If the noxious heat stimulus is repeated, this enhancement persists even longer. These changes may prime this information pathway so that subsequent injuries may feel even worse and the associative learning that results in pain-related avoidance may be promoted.
Pain is an important defence against dangers in our environment; however, some clinical conditions produce pain that outlasts this useful role and persists even after the injury has healed. The experience of pain consists of somatosensory elements of intensity and location, negative emotional/aversive feelings and subsequent restrictions on lifestyle as a result of a learned association between certain activities and pain. The amygdala contributes negative emotional value to nociceptive sensory information and forms the association between an aversive response and the environment in which it occurs. It is able to form this association because it receives nociceptive information via the spino-parabrachio-amygdaloid pathway and polymodal sensory information via cortical and thalamic inputs. Synaptic plasticity occurs at the parabrachial-amygdala synapse and other brain regions in chronic pain conditions with ongoing injury; however, very little is known about how plasticity occurs in conditions with no ongoing injury. Using immunohistochemistry, electrophysiology and behavioural assays, we show that a brief nociceptive stimulus with no ongoing injury is able to produce long-lasting synaptic plasticity at the rat parabrachial-amygdala synapse. We show that this plasticity is caused by an increase in postsynaptic AMPA receptors with a transient change in the AMPA receptor subunit, similar to long-term potentiation. Furthermore, this synaptic potentiation primes the synapse so that a subsequent noxious stimulus causes prolonged potentiation of the nociceptive information flow into the amygdala. As a result, a second injury could have an increased negative emotional value and promote associative learning that results in pain-related avoidance.
慢性疼痛会使人丧失能力,因为患者会在疼痛与工作等活动之间形成负面关联,从而导致患者限制这些活动。传入杏仁核的疼痛信息负责形成这些关联,并在我们疼痛时让我们感觉不适。持续的损伤会增强疼痛信息向杏仁核的传递。如果我们想了解为什么慢性疼痛在没有持续损伤的情况下仍会持续,那么了解损伤愈合后这种促进作用是否仍会持续就很重要。在本研究中,我们发现,一次持续2分钟的有害热刺激(无持续损伤)能够在3天内增强疼痛信息向杏仁核的传递。如果重复进行有害热刺激,这种增强作用会持续更长时间。这些变化可能会使这条信息通路处于准备状态,从而使后续损伤可能感觉更糟,并可能促进导致与疼痛相关回避行为的联想学习。
疼痛是对我们周围环境中危险的重要防御;然而,一些临床病症会产生持续时间超过其有益作用的疼痛,甚至在损伤愈合后仍会持续。疼痛体验包括强度和位置的体感成分、负面情绪/厌恶感,以及由于某些活动与疼痛之间的习得关联而导致的对生活方式的后续限制。杏仁核对伤害性感觉信息赋予负面情绪价值,并在厌恶反应与其发生的环境之间形成关联。它能够形成这种关联是因为它通过脊髓-臂旁核-杏仁核通路接收伤害性信息,并通过皮层和丘脑输入接收多模式感觉信息。在伴有持续损伤的慢性疼痛状态下,臂旁核-杏仁核突触和其他脑区会发生突触可塑性;然而,对于在没有持续损伤的情况下可塑性如何发生,我们知之甚少。通过免疫组织化学、电生理学和行为学检测,我们发现一次无持续损伤的短暂伤害性刺激能够在大鼠臂旁核-杏仁核突触处产生持久的突触可塑性。我们发现这种可塑性是由突触后AMPA受体增加以及AMPA受体亚基的短暂变化引起的,类似于长时程增强。此外,这种突触增强使突触处于准备状态,从而使随后的有害刺激导致伤害性信息流进入杏仁核的时间延长。结果,第二次损伤可能会具有更高的负面情绪价值,并促进导致与疼痛相关回避行为的联想学习。