FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 10, 2009
Contact: Donna Krupa
Office: (301) 634-7209
dkrupa@the-aps.org
Males May Experience
Greater Physical Pain Due To Lower Levels
Of A Key Protein, Endothelin
MONTREAL, CN (September 10, 2009) − Agonizing
physical pain, known as vaso-occlusive pain, can afflict children who have
sickle cell disease (SCD). In some cases infants as young as two months of
age suffer vaso-occlusive pain so severe that opiate medications and
hospitalizations are their only relief. Researchers believe vaso-occlusion
is caused by a blockage of the blood vessels that occurs when sickle shaped
red cells attempt to pass through the round blood vessels. How
vaso-occulsion leads to pain, and its impact on males and females are still
unknown. A University of South Carolina research team suggests that a
naturally occurring chemical in the body, endothelin (ET), may play a role.
ET is produced by most tissues in the body and is
highly concentrated in blood vessels. It causes blood vessels to contract,
which contributes to pain. ET is the most potent blood vessel constrictor
currently known. Characterized by a molecular structure similar to snake
venom, ET can pack the punch of a bee sting.
Researchers Sarah Sweitzer, Federico Perez and Alvin
McKelvy, Department of Pharmacology, Physiology and Neuroscience, University
of South Carolina, Columbia have conducted several studies involving ET and
vaso-occlusion pain. They are presenting an update of their work, “Sexually
Dimorphic Nociceptive Priming by Endothelin: Involvement of the Endothelin B
Receptor,” as part of the 11th International Conference on
Endothelin being held September 9-12, 2009 in Montreal, CN. The program
is being sponsored by the American Physiological Society (APS;
www.the-aps.org). A copy of the complete program is available at
http://the-aps.org/meetings/aps/ET11Montreal/index.htm.
Pain Early and Later in Life: Two-Part Study
The study was conducted in two parts. During phase I,
50 SCD+ adolescents (male and females between ages 8-18) were studied at the
university’s Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorder Center. During the
youngsters’ routine visits researchers videotaped the participants during
the needle stick blood draw process and asked the participants to rate their
pain level during the blood draw. The scoring system used emoticons that
indicated pain levels between 0-10. The blood was then analyzed for the
presence of endothelin, which was found to increase with the child’s
increasing pain
In phase II the team constructed an animal model using
endothelin that allowed them to control the age at first vaso-occlusive pain
and the effect of repeated vaso-occlusive events on subsequent pain events.
Endothelin was administered to young rats seven days
after birth and again on day 11 to model repeated painful vaso-occlusive
type episodes. A different group experienced its first ET-1 exposure 11 days
after birth. The two groups were compared.
Males More Sensitized to Pain
In the animal model the researchers found:
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Males had a greater pain response if they had been
“primed” to pain by a first exposure to ET-1. Moreover, their pain
radiated virtually throughout the body rather than being confined to the
localized area of the pain experience.
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By contrast, females had a lower pain response if they had
been primed, meaning they were de-sensitized to pain after a first
exposure to ET-1. Further, unlike the males, female desensitization was
localized rather than widespread.
The data from the clinic study showed similar results:
Role of Endothelin, Endorphins and Hormones
According to Sweitzer, these findings may be due to a
change in the endothelin B receptor (ETBR). This receptor is important in
the body’s internal ability to control pain. That is because ETBR resides in
many places within the body, including the cells that make up skin.
When the receptor is activated, it releases endorphins
(the body’s natural opiate) throughout the body. “We are finding that the
males who experience repeated pain do not have as much of the receptor and
therefore do not release as much of the endorphins,” Sweitzer explained.
Conversely, the team has found that females have more
of the ETB receptor. “Females experience better pain control and have more
of the receptor. This juxtaposition may help explain sensitivity by gender.
The difference in the endothelin receptor may help explain why we are
finding males more sensitized to pain.”
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To schedule
an interview with Dr. Sweitzer please contact
Donna Krupa,
301.634.7209,
DKrupa@the-APS.org. To view the complete program for the
International Conference on Endothelin conference, log on to
http://the-aps.org/meetings/aps/ET11Montreal/index.htm.
***
Physiology
is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create
health or disease. The American Physiological Society (APS;
www.the-APS.org/press) has been an integral part of the
discovery process since it was established in 1887.
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