3.8 Article

Developmental mechanisms of CPSP: Clinical observations and translational laboratory evaluations

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/24740527.2021.1999796

关键词

pain; surgery; children; nociception; developmental neurobiology; somatosensory phenotype

资金

  1. Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity [W1071H, W1071I]

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Understanding the mechanisms and potential interventions for the transition from acute to chronic pain is crucial for preventing or minimizing chronic postsurgical pain. Clinical observations and laboratory studies have provided insights into the acute and long-term effects of surgical injury on nociceptive pathways, including changes in sensitivity, age and sex-dependent mechanisms, potential intervention targets, and the impact of prior surgical injury.
Understanding mechanisms that underly the transition from acute to chronic pain and identifying potential targets for preventing or minimizing this progression have specific relevance for chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). Though it is clear that multiple psychosocial, family, and environmental factors may influence CPSP, this review will focus on parallels between clinical observations and translational laboratory studies investigating the acute and long-term effects of surgical injury on nociceptive pathways. This includes data related to alterations in sensitivity at different points along nociceptive pathways from the periphery to the brain; age- and sex-dependent mechanisms underlying the transition from acute to persistent pain; potential targets for preventive interventions; and the impact of prior surgical injury. Ongoing preclinical studies evaluating age- and sex-dependent mechanisms will also inform comparative efficacy and preclinical safety assessments of potential preventive pharmacological interventions aimed at reducing the risk of CPSP. In future clinical studies, more detailed and longitudinal peri-operative phenotyping with patient- and parent-reported chronic pain core outcomes, alongside more specialized evaluations of somatosensory function, modulation, and circuitry, may enhance understanding of individual variability in postsurgical pain trajectories and improve recognition and management of CPSP.

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