Scientists Discover a Hidden Network of 'Mini Brains' That Could be Responsible for Pain
Scientists have found evidence of a hidden network of 'mini
brains' that could overhaul our understanding of how pain is transmitted
throughout the body, and revolutionise the way we design pain medication.
The current assumption is that pain sensations are only
interpreted by the central nervous system - the brain and spinal cord. But the
new research suggests that the peripheral
nervous system plays a much more important role that's been eluding us
for centuries.
To be clear, this research has only been done in rats and
mice for now, and the results need to be replicated in humans before we think
about rewriting the textbooks.
But given the similarities between rodent and human nervous
systems, the finding provides a pretty compelling reason to take a closer look
at the peripheral nervous system in humans, too. Especially given the
ongoing struggle to create effective
pain relief for chronic and severe pain.
"We don't yet know how the system works, but the
machinery is definitely in place to allow the peripheral system to interpret
and modify the tactile information perceived by the brain in terms of
interpreting pain, warmth or the solidity of objects," said leadresearcher Nikita Gamper from the University of Leeds in the UK.
"Further research is needed to understand exactly how
it operates, but we have no reason to believe that the same nerve arrangements
would not exist in humans."
The peripheral nervous system is the name given to all the
nerves that feed into the central nervous system from around our body.
For those who didn't study anatomy, everything in blue in
the image below is the peripheral nervous system, and the yellow - the spinal
cord and the brain - is the central nervous system.
As you can see, the peripheral nervous system is pretty well
mapped, but up until now, researchers had assumed that it was little more than
a wiring system, shuttling in messages from the rest of the body to the
all-overseeing central nervous system.
All the decisions, researchers thought, were made only by
the central nervous system - mainly the brain - which then shuttled messages
out via the peripheral nervous system to tell the body how to react.
This is part of the 'Gate Control Theory of Pain' which suggests
that a simple 'gate' exists between the peripheral and central nervous systems,
controlling what information is sent to the central system.
The study now suggests that it's a lot more sensitive than
that - the peripheral nervous system could actually be altering signals before
they even reach the central nervous system.
"Peripheral nerves have the ability to dial up or down
the signal which goes through these gates to the brain," saidGamper. "Importantly, we believe that these gates can be exploited for
therapeutic control of pain."
In recent
years, some evidence has emerged that the peripheral nervous system might
actually play a more complex role in the body, but this is the first solid
evidence that it could be interpreting and modulating pain sensations.
The new research looked specifically at the ganglia of the
peripheral nervous system, a collection of 'nodules' that were previously
thought to only help shuttle messages through the nervous system, not
communicate amongst themselves.
After spending five years studying ganglia cells taken from
mice and rats in the lab, they found that they could actually exchange
information with each other with the help of the signallingmolecule GABA - an ability that was previously believed to be
restricted to the central nervous system.
More than that, when the researchers stimulated pain signals
in rats, they found evidence through this GABA pathway that the ganglia cells
were communicating with each other, and regulating and changing the signal they
sent on to the central nervous system.
"When our research team looked more closely at the
peripheral system, we found the machinery for neuronal communication did exist
in the peripheral nervous system's structure. It is as if each sensory nerve
has its own 'mini-brain', which to an extent, can interpret incoming
information," said
Gamper.
"We found the peripheral nervous system has the ability
to alter the information sent to the brain, rather than blindly passing
everything on to the central nervous system."
While there's a lot more work to be done to understand how
this works in the human body, and if this network of 'mini brains' exist at all
in humans. If confirmed, it would be a huge deal for researchers working on
better painkillers.
Right now, pain relief drugs only target the central nervous
system, and the most effective ones have some pretty severe
side effects, such as addition and building up tolerance in patients over
time.
If new medication could instead target the peripheral
nervous system, it could lead to the development of non-addictive and
non-drowsy drugs that are more effective.
"This dramatically changes our understanding of pain
medication because in theory it is now possible to target drugs at the
peripheral nervous system which could widen the type of treatments
available," said one
of the team, Xiaona Du from Hebei Medical University in China.
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