Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters

Database
Language
Affiliation country
Publication year range
1.
J Neurosci ; 44(17)2024 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38658164

ABSTRACT

Pain is considered a multidimensional experience that embodies not merely sensation, but also emotion and perception. As is appropriate for this complexity, pain is represented and processed by an extensive matrix of cortical and subcortical structures. Of these structures, the cerebellum is gaining increasing attention. Although association between the cerebellum and both acute and chronic pain have been extensively detailed in electrophysiological and neuroimaging studies, a deep understanding of what functions are mediated by these associations is lacking. Nevertheless, the available evidence implies that lobules IV-VI and Crus I are especially pertinent to pain processing, and anatomical studies reveal that these regions connect with higher-order structures of sensorimotor, emotional, and cognitive function. Therefore, we speculate that the cerebellum exerts a modulatory role in pain via its communication with sites of sensorimotor, executive, reward, and limbic function. On this basis, in this review, we propose numerous ways in which the cerebellum might contribute to both acute and chronic pain, drawing particular attention to emotional and cognitive elements of pain. In addition, we emphasise the importance of advancing our knowledge about the relationship between the cerebellum and pain by discussing novel therapeutic opportunities that capitalize on this association.


Subject(s)
Cerebellum , Pain , Humans , Cerebellum/physiopathology , Cerebellum/diagnostic imaging , Animals , Pain/physiopathology , Pain/psychology , Emotions/physiology
2.
Exp Neurol ; 382: 114969, 2024 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39332798

ABSTRACT

The sleep-wake cycle plays an influential role in the development and progression of repeat mild traumatic brain injury (RmTBI)-related pathology. Therefore, we first aimed to manipulate the sleep-wake cycle post-RmTBI using modafinil, a wake-promoting substance used for the treatment of narcolepsy. We hypothesized that modafinil would exacerbate RmTBI-induced deficits. Chronic behavioural analyses were completed along with a 27-plex serum cytokine array, metabolomic and proteomic analyses of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), as well as immunohistochemical staining in structures important for sleep/wake cycles, to examine orexin, melanin-concentrating hormone, tyrosine hydroxylase, and choline acetyltransferase, in the lateral hypothalamus, locus coeruleus, and basal forebrain, respectively. Contrary to expectation, modafinil administration attenuated behavioural deficits, metabolomic changes, and neuropathological modifications. Therefore, the second aim was to determine if the beneficial effects of modafinil treatment were driven by the orexinergic system. The same experimental protocol was used; however, RmTBI rats received chronic orexin-A administration instead of modafinil. Orexin-A administration produced drastically different outcomes, exacerbating anxiety-related and motor deficits, while also significantly disrupting their metabolomic and neuropathological profiles. These results suggest that the beneficial effects of modafinil administration post-RmTBI, work independently of its wake-promoting properties, as activation of the orexinergic wake-promoting system with orexin-A was detrimental. Overall, these findings highlight the complexity of sleep-wake changes in the injured brain and showcase the potential of the arousal and sleep systems in its treatment.

3.
Neurobiol Pain ; 14: 100145, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38099278

ABSTRACT

Chronic pain develops following injury in approximately 20% of adolescents, at twice the rate in females than males. Adverse childhood experiences also increase the risk for poor health outcomes, such as chronic pain. Emerging literature suggests the cerebellum to be involved in pain processing, however detailed explorations into how the cerebellum contributes to pain are lacking. Therefore, this study aimed to characterise chronic pain outcomes and cerebellar gene expression changes following early life stress and injury in both sexes. The adverse childhood experience of neglect was modelled using a maternal separation (MS) paradigm, which was combined with a subsequent injury (mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) or plantar incision surgery) in adolescent male and female Sprague-Dawley rats. We measured behavioural nociceptive sensitivity, systemic modulators of pain such as calcitonin gene-related protein (CGRP) and Substance P, as well as gene expression of IL1ß, GFAP, GR, MR, GABRA1, CNR1, MAOA, and DAT1 in the cerebellum to examine associations between pain and neuroinflammation, the stress response, inhibitory neurotransmission, and monoaminergic function. We found increases in mechanical nociceptive sensitivity following plantar incision surgery. Sex differences were observed in anxiety-like behaviour and neuroinflammation, whereas systemic pain modulators showed cumulative effects with the addition of stressors. Most interestingly however, the increases in nociceptive sensitivity were associated with the suppressed expression of cerebellar genes that regulate stress, inhibition, cannabinoid function, and dopaminergic function, alongside sex-dependent distinctions for genes involved in inflammation and injury. This study highlights a novel link between nociception and molecular function in the cerebellum. Further investigation into how the cerebellum contributes to pain in males and females will facilitate novel therapeutic insights and opportunities.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL