Pain: Molecular mechanisms,☆☆,

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Abstract

Our understanding of chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain at the molecular and cellular level has developed at an extraordinary rate in recent years. Inflammatory, or neuropathic, neuronal plasticity describes the process by which the neurons involved in pain transmission are converted from a state of normosensitivity to one in which they are hypersensitive. Here we summarize current theories on somatosensory neuroplasticity in a molecular context, highlighting key receptors, ion channels, and signal molecules involved. We also suggest new possibilities for drug design, based on the rational targeting of these molecular players.

Keywords

Pain
neuropathic
inflammatory
plasticity
DRG
dorsal horn

Cited by (0)

Suported in part by NIH NS38253-1, Medical Research Council G9431792, and Wellcome Trust 039614.

☆☆

Address reprint requests to Clifford J. Woolf, MD, PhD, Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Massachusetts General Hospital, 149 13th St, Room 4309, Charlestown, MA 02129. E-mail: [email protected]

1526-5900/00/0103-0107$8.00/0