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NF-κB Links CO2 Sens ing to Innate Immuni ty and Inflammation in Mammalian Cells

Viktig studie som nevner at økt CO2 kan dempe betennelser.

http://www.jimmunol.org/content/185/7/4439.long

In this study, we demonstrate that mammalian cells (mouse embryonic fibroblasts and others) also sense changes in local CO2 levels, leading to altered gene expression via the NF-κB pathway. IKKα, a central regulatory component of NF-κB, rapidly and reversibly translocates to the nucleus in response to elevated CO2. This response is independent of hypoxia-inducible factor hydroxylases, extracellular and intracellular pH, and pathways that mediate acute CO2-sensing in nematodes and flies and leads to attenuation of bacterial LPS-induced gene expression. These results suggest the existence of a molecular CO2 sensor in mammalian cells that is linked to the regulation of genes involved in innate immunity and inflammation.

FIGURE 7.Hypercapnia promotes an anti-inflammatory profile of gene expression. A PCR array of genes known to be involved in the NF-κB signaling cascade was performed on A549 cells exposed to ambient or 10% CO2 ± LT (100 ng/ml) for 4 h. A selection of differentially expressed genes from the array were chosen for validation. CCL2 (A), ICAM1 (B), TNF-α (C), and IL-10 (D) message levels were determined by quantitative real-time PCR and expressed as a percentage of LT-induced gene expression at 0.03% CO2 (n = 3 ± SEM, one-way ANOVA, Tukey post-test).

Traditionally, CO2 has been considered a waste product of respiration, and its biologic activity is poorly understood in terms of gene expression. However, a recent study reported differential gene expression in elevated CO2 (9).

This study suggests the existence of an intracellular CO2 sensor that is associated with anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive signaling, is independent of intracellular and extracellular pH, and could account for the above clinical observations. CO2 can profoundly influence the transcriptional activation of the NF-κB pathway but its transcriptional effects may extend to other as yet uncharacterized pathways. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of CO2-dependent intracellular signaling could lead to new therapies in which the suppression of immunity or inflammation is clinically desirable.

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Inflammation and the pathophysiology of work-related musculoskeletal disorders

Viktig studie om betennelse og hvordan det påvirker muskler og annet vev i kroppen. Nevner gangen i prosessen: repetitiv muskelsammentrekning, økning i betennelsesfaktorer for å reprere, manglende restitusjon, økning i fibrøst vev (arrvev), kompresjon på nerver, myalgi, økt temperament, osv. Nevner også hvordan betennelser påvirker psyken; depresjon, nedsatt seksuallyst, tilbaketrekning, smerter, m.m. IL-6 gir utmattelse.

Den beskriver hvordan cytokiner sprøytet inn i mus gir «sickness behaviour» og hyperalgesi (økt smertesensitivitet). Studien her forholder seg mest til betennelser som følge av repetitive bevegelser, men dette utsagnet vil også tilsi at kosthold som øker pro-inflammatoriske cytokiner kan bidra til hyperalgesi.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1552097/

Results from several clinical and experimental studies indicate that tissue microtraumas occur as a consequence of performing repetitive and/or forceful tasks, and that this mechanical tissue injury leads to local and perhaps even systemic inflammation, followed by fibrotic and structural tissue changes.

We also propose a conceptual framework suggesting the potential roles that inflammation may play in these disorders, and how inflammation may contribute to pain, motor dysfunction, and to puzzling psychological symptoms that are often characteristic of patients with work-related MSDs.

Several recent clinical and experimental studies have been published indicating that inflammation plays a role in the development of tissue pathologies associated with these chronic disorders.

The US Department of Labor defines work-related MSDs as injuries or disorders of the muscles, nerves, tendons, joints, cartilage, and spinal discs associated with exposure to risk factors in the workplace. MSDs include sprains, strains, tears, back pain, soreness, pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, musculoskeletal system, or connective tissue diseases and disorders, when the event or exposure leading to the injury or illness is bodily reaction/bending, climbing, crawling, reaching, twisting; overexertion; or repetition (Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2005). Several risk factors are associated with the development or exacerbation of MSDs in the workplace, including physical, biomechanical, individual predisposition, and psychosocial conditions.

Psychosocial risk factors in the workplace also contribute to MSDs. These factors are associated with levels of workplace stress, such as job content and demands, job control, and social support (National Research Council, 2001). Non-workplace factors may also contribute to the development and exacerbation of MSDs, such as similar physical or high stress levels in the home. Certain past or present medical conditions also represent comorbid risk factors for MSDs (National Research Council, 2001).

Examples include past traumatic injury to the affected body part, systemic diseases that affect the musculoskeletal system, and diseases/disorders of the circulatory system. Women appear more susceptible than men to the development of MSDs, although this is highly industry-dependent. Advanced age or obesity may increase the impact of other risk factors on the severity of MSDs (National Research Council, 2001).

Musculotendinous injuries resulting from performing repetitive and/or forceful tasks are due to repeated overstretch, compression, friction, ischemia, and overexertion. We hypothesize that these injuries lead initially to an inflammatory response (Fig. 1). While the ultimate outcome of inflammation is to replace or repair injured tissues with healthy, regenerated tissue, Copstead and Banadki, 2000, when continued task performance is superimposed upon injured and inflamed tissue a vicious cycle of injury, chronic or systemic inflammation, fibrosis, and perhaps even tissue breakdown may occur. The end result is often pain and loss of motor function.


Schematic diagram showing three primary pathways hypothesized to lead to work-related musculoskeletal disorders caused by repetitive and/or forceful hand-intensive tasks: CNS reorganization (reviewed in Barr et al., 2004), tissue injury, or tissue reorganization.

Hirata et al. (2005) divided patients into symptom duration groups (<3, 4-7, 8-12, and >12 months).

  • Edematous changes were found in these tissues in patients of ❤ month duration.
  • Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) were increased in patients of 4-7 month symptom duration,
  • while fibrotic changes were present in patients of longer symptom duration (>7 months).

PGE2 is a factor believed to cause vasodilation, edema, and enhancement of cytokines that induce synoviocyte proliferation, while VEGF is associated with endothelial and vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation during chronic inflammation. In Hirata’s study, both molecules peak in the intermediate phase (4-7 months) of CTS-induced tendosynovial changes and appear to contribute to tissue remodeling. Hirata postulates that since PGE2 is thought to regulate the production of several molecules, that it may regulate VEGF production in tenosynovium.

The increase in IL-6 is interesting. IL-6 has both inflammatory and anti-inflammatory properties, the latter primarily to suppress low-grade inflammation (Biffl et al., 1996). IL-6 is a tightly regulated cytokine normally not detectable in serum unless there is trauma, infection, or cellular stress, at which time IL-6 is an early cytokine responder. Pro-inflammatory effects of IL-6 include induction of cell growth and proliferation, and acute-phase responses, while its anti-inflammatory actions include inducing increases in serum IL-1 receptor antagonist and soluble TNF receptor (Biffl et al., 1996).

Trapezius muscle biopsies from male and female workers with either continuous or intermittent trapezius myalgia of at least 12 months duration show evidence of myopathic changes such as moth eaten and ragged, red type I muscle fibers, increased frequency of type II myofibers and atrophic myofibers consistent with muscle injury, and denervation/ischemic loss of muscle fibers, but no evidence of inflammation (Larsson et al., 2001). In contrast, Dennet and Fry (1988) examining the first dorsal interosseous muscle collected from 29 patients with painful chronic overuse syndrome found increased inflammatory cells as well as myopathic changes.

The first study, by Freeland et al. (2002) detected increased serum malondialdehyde, an indicator of cell stress, in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome, but no serum increases in PGE2, IL-1, or IL-6.

A recent study by Kuiper et al. (2005), examined serum for biomarkers of collagen synthesis and degradation (but not for biomarkers of injury or inflammation) in construction workers involved in heavy manual materials handling. Both collagen synthesis and degradation products were increased in workers involved in heavy manual tasks, although the overall ratio of synthesis to degradation products remained the same as in sedentary workers. Kuiper’s results suggest that tissues undergo adaptive growth responses that protect them from unresolved degradation.

In the third study, elevated plasma fibrinogen were present in subjects with low job control, linking perceived job stress with a biomarker of chronic inflammation (Clays et al., 2005).

a recently submitted study from our lab found increased pro-inflammatory cytokines in serum of patients with moderate and severe work-related MSD.

Archambault et al. (1997) observed hypercellularity, inflammatory cells, increased inflammatory cytokines, and increased mRNA of matrix molecules in the tendon by 6-8 weeks. When the kicking protocol was prolonged to 11 weeks, the inflammatory responses were apparently resolved. Instead, matrix reorganization processes, such as increased mRNA for collagen type III and matrix metalloproteinases, were observed (Archambault et al., 2001). Thus, in the higher demand kicking task, inflammation and tissue pathology were simultaneously present, while in the lower demand kicking task, inflammation preceeded matrix reorganization which may be a beneficial adaptive reorganization since no necrosis was observed.

In a series of studies, they report evidence of inflammation and angiogenesis (hypercellularity; increased COX-2 and VEGF mRNA) after 4 weeks of running at a rate of 17 m/min on a decline, 1 h/day for 5 days/week. These changes persisted through 16 weeks. They also found tendon thickening and reduced biomechanical tissue tolerance, changes that increased with continued exposure. Thus, repetitive tendon overuse is associated with inflammation. The tendon tissue is unable to launch a successful healing response due to continued use, and becomes fibrotic and structurally damaged.

These dose-dependent findings are similar to our recently submitted human study in which a systemic inflammatory mediator/marker response was greater in patients with moderate and severe MSD compared to mild.

In MSD, the primary causes of peripheral nerve trauma are over-stretch and compression of neuronal tissues during excursion (reviewed in Barr et al., 2004).

Animal models of chronic nerve constriction injury using ligatures show that chronic compression leads to an upregulation of intraneural inflammatory cytokines, fibrosis, Schwann cell death, axonal demyelination, and declines in electrophysiological function.
In our rat model, we found decreased nerve conduction velocity (NCV) in the median nerve at the wrist. By week 10 in HRLF rats, there was a small (9%) but significant decrease in NCV (Clark et al., 2003), demonstrating that nerve injury accumulates with continued task performance and leads to a clinically relevant loss of nerve function.

The association of motor behavioral changes with tissue changes in both our and Messner’s studies indicates that functional declines accompany tissue injury, inflammation and fibrosis/degeneration.

The psychoneuroimmunological effects of pro-inflammatory cytokines, specifically IL-1β, TNF-α, and IL-6, have been extensively studied in humans and in animal models over the past decade for their contribution to a constellation of physiological and behavioral responses known collectively as the “sickness behaviors”. This response includes fever, weakness, listlessness, hyperalgesia, allodynia, decreased social interaction and exploration, somnolence, decreased sexual activity, and decreased food and water intake (amply reviewed by Capuron and Dantzer, 2003Wieseler-Frank et al., 2005). Sickness behaviors can be induced by administration of exogenous cytokines to animals, whether the cytokines were injected peripherally or centrally. One mechanism of action, the immune-to-brain communication through activation of brain and spinal cord glial cells was reviewed by Wieseler-Frank et al. (2005). Activation of CNS glia and subsequent production of inflammatory cytokines can lead to hyperalgesia.

Cohen et al. (1997) have also speculated that the elevation of serum IL-6 produces fatigue, which then may be responsible for decreases in an individual’s ability to perform functionally. The possibility for patients with chronic inflammatory conditions to succumb to the depressive effects of local and systemic pro-inflammatory cytokines has implications in the management of overuse MSDs.

Symptoms of depression, anxiety, heightened job stress, more anger with their employer, higher pain ratings, greater reactivity to pain, enhanced feelings of being overwhelmed by pain, and low confidence in problem solving abilities have been reported in numerous epidemiological and clinical studies of patients with MSDs (Clays et al., 2005Gold et al., 2006Shaw et al., 2002).

We hypothesize that performance of repetitive and/or forceful tasks may induce MSDs through three primary pathways: (1) CNS reorganization, (2) tissue injury, and (3) tissue reorganization.

The extent of these changes is dependent on task exposure (duration and level). A systemic response may be stimulated by cytokines released into the blood stream by injured tissues and immune cells. Circulating cytokines can stimulate global responses such as widespread increase in macrophages, local and distant tissue sensitization, and perhaps the induction of sickness behaviors, depression or anxiety, as may cytokine elevation in peripheral nerve tissues.

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Bench-to-bedside review: Carbon dioxide

Om CO2 i helbredelse av vev. Viktig oversikt som nevner CO2 sin bane og effekt gjennom hele organismen – fra DNA til celle til vev til blod. Bekrefter ALT jeg har funnet om CO2 og pusteknikkene. Nevner også potensiell farer, som kun skjer ved akutt hypercapnia. Nevner også en meget spennende konsept om å buffre CO2 acidose med bikarbonat (Natron). I kliniske tilfeller på sykehus kan det ha negative effekter, men hos normale mennesker vil det virke som en effektiv buffer.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2887152/

Hypercapnia may play a beneficial role in the pathogenesis of inflammation and tissue injury, but may hinder the host response to sepsis and reduce repair. In contrast, hypocapnia may be a pathogenic entity in the setting of critical illness.

For practical purposes, PaCO2 reflects the rate of CO2 elimination.

The commonest reason for hypercapnia in ventilated patients is a reduced tidal volume (VT); this situation is termed permissive hypercapnia.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2887152/table/T1/?report=previmg

High VT causes, or potentiates, lung injury [4]. Smaller VT often leads to elevated PaCO2, termed permissive hypercapnia, and is associated with better survival [5,6]. These low-VT strategies are not confined to patients with acute lung injury (ALI)/acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); they were first reported successful in severe asthma [7], and attest to the overall safety of hypercapnia. Indeed, hypercapnia in the presence of higher VT may independently improve survival [8].

Hypocapnia is common in several diseases (Table ​(Table1;1; for example, early asthma, high-altitude pulmonary edema, lung injury), is a common acid-base disturbance and a criterion for systemic inflammatory response syndrome [9], and is a prognostic marker of adverse outcome in diabetic ketoacidosis [10]. Hypocapnia – often prolonged – remains common in the management of adult [11] and pediatric [12] acute brain injury.

Table 1

Causes of hypocapnia

Hypoxemia Altitude, pulmonary disease
Pulmonary disorders Pneumonia, interstitial pneumonitis, fibrosis, edema, pulmonary emboli, vascular disease, bronchial asthma, pneumothorax
Cardiovascular system disorders Congestive heart failure, hypotension
Metabolic disorders Acidosis (diabetic, renal, lactic), hepatic failure
Central nervous system disorders Psychogenic/anxiety hyperventilation, central nervous system infection, central nervous system tumors
Drug induced Salicylates, methylxanthines, β-adrenergic agonists, progesterone
Miscellaneous Fever, sepsis, pain, pregnancy

CO2 is carried in the blood as HCO3-, in combination with hemoglobin and plasma proteins, and in solution. Inside the cell, CO2 interacts with H2O to produce carbonic acid (H2CO3), which is in equilibrium with H+ and HCO3-, a reaction catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase. CO2 transport into cells is complex, and passive diffusion, specific transporters and rhesus proteins may all be involved.

CO2 is sensed in central and peripheral neurons. Changes in CO2 and H+ are sensed in chemosensitive neurons in the carotid body and in the hindbrain [13,14]. Whether CO2 or the pH are preferentially sensed is unclear, but the ventilatory response to hypercapnic acidosis (HCA) exceeds that of an equivalent degree of metabolic acidosis [15], suggesting specific CO2 sensing.

An in vitro study has demonstrated that elevated CO2 levels suppress expression of TNF and other cytokines by pulmonary artery endothelial cells via suppression of NF-κB activation [18].

Furthermore, hypercapnia inhibits pulmonary epithelial wound repair also via an NF-κB mechanism [19].

The physiologic effects of CO2 are diverse and incompletely understood, with direct effects often counterbalanced by indirect effects.

Hypocapnia can worsen ventilation-perfusion matching and gas exchange in the lung via a number of mechanisms, including bronchoconstriction [21], reduction in collateral ventilation [22], reduction in parenchymal compliance [23], and attenuation of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and increased intrapulmonary shunting [24].

CO2 stimulates ventilation (see above). Peripheral chemoreceptors respond more rapidly than the central neurons, but central chemosensors make a larger contribution to stimulating ventilation. CO2increases cerebral blood flow (CBF) by 1 to 2 ml/100 g/minute per 1 mmHg in PaCO2[25], an effect mediated by pH rather than by the partial pressure of CO2.

Hypercapnia elevates both the partial pressure of O2 in the blood and CBF, and reducing PaCO2 to 20 to 25 mmHg decreases CBF by 40 to 50% [26]. The effect of CO2 on CBF is far larger than its effect on the cerebral blood volume. During sustained hypocapnia, CBF recovers to within 10% baseline by 4 hours; and because lowered HCO3-returns the pH towards normal, abrupt normalization of CO2 results in (net) alkalemia and risks rebound hyperemia.

Hypocapnia increases both neuronal excitability and excitatory (glutamatergic) synaptic transmission, and suppresses GABA-A-mediated inhibition, resulting in increased O2 consumption and uncoupling of metabolism to CBF [27].

Hypercapnia directly inhibits cardiac and vascular muscle contractility, effects that are counterbalanced by sympathoadrenal increases in heart rate and contractility, increasing the cardiac output overall [28].

Indeed, a large body of evidence now attests to the ability of hypercapnia to increase peripheral tissue oxygenation, independently of its effects on cardiac output [30,31].

The beneficial effects of HCA in such models are increasingly well understood, and include attenuation of lung neutrophil recruitment, pulmonary and systemic cytokine concentrations, cell apoptosis, and O2-derived and nitrogen-derived free radical injury.

Concern has been raised regarding the potential for the anti-inflammatory effects of HCA to impair the host response to infection. In early pulmonary infection, this potential impairment does not appear to occur, with HCA reducing the severity of acute-severe Escherichia coli pneumonia-induced ALI [41]. In the setting of more established E. coli pneumonia, HCA is also protective [42].

Hypocapnia increases microvascular permeability and impairs alveolar fluid reabsorption in the isolated rat lung, due to an associated decrease in Na/K-ATPase activity [47].

HCA protects the heart following ischemia-reperfusion injury.

Hypercapnia attenuates hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in the immature rat [52] and protects the porcine brain from reoxygenation injury by attenuation of free radical action. Hypercapnia increases the size of the region at risk of infarction in experimental acute focal ischemia; in hypoxic-ischemic injury in the immature rat brain, hypocapnia worsens the histologic magnitude of stroke [52] and is associated with a decrease in CBF to the hypoxia-injured brain as well as disturbance of glucose utilization and phosphate reserves.

Indeed, hypocapnia may be directly neurotoxic, through increased incorporation of choline into membrane phospholipids [56].

Rapid induction of hypercapnia in the critically ill patient may have adverse effects. Acute hypercapnia impairs myocardial function.

In patients managed with protective ventilation strategies, buffering of the acidosis induced by hypercapnia remains a common – albeit controversial – clinical practice.
While bicarbonate may correct the arterial pH, it may worsen an intracellular acidosis because the CO2 produced when bicarbonate reacts with metabolic acids diffuses readily across cell membranes, whereas bicarbonate cannot.

Hypocapnia is an underappreciated phenomenon in the critically ill patient, and is potentially deleterious, particularly when severe or prolonged. Hypocapnia should be avoided except in specific clinical situations; when induced, hypercapnic acidosis should be for specific indications while definitive measures are undertaken.

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Hypercapnia Induces Cleavage and Nuclear Localization of RelB Protein, Giving Insight into CO2 Sensing and Signaling

Viktig studie om CO2 som betennelsesdempende, og den fremtredende rolle i moderne forskning, og hvordan kroppen og cellene bruker det som signalstoff. Nevner at det demper betennelse ved å dempe pro-inflammatoriske genuttrykk.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3340129/

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is increasingly being appreciated as an intracellular signaling molecule that affects inflammatory and immune responses.

In patients suffering from this syndrome (COPD), therapeutic hypoventilation strategy designed to reduce mechanical damage to the lungs is accompanied by systemic hypercapnia and associated acidosis, which are associated with improved patient outcome.

Recently, a role for the non-canonical NF-κB pathway has been postulated to be important in signaling the cellular transcriptional response to CO2. (Om NF-kB her: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NF-κB)

Taken together, these data demonstrate that RelB is a CO2-sensitive NF-κB family member that may contribute to the beneficial effects of hypercapnia in inflammatory diseases of the lung.

The physiologic gas nitric oxide (NO) is sensed by cells and profoundly impacts upon intracellular signaling pathways through altering the activity of enzymes, including guanylate cyclase and cytochrome c oxidase (1,2). Furthermore molecular oxygen, another physiologic gas, is also sensed by cells and elicits signaling responses through altering hydroxylase activity, leading to activation of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) (3). Carbon dioxide (CO2), a product of oxidative metabolism, is another physiologic gas with a recently appreciated role in the suppression of proinflammatory transcriptional pathways (4).

Patients in respiratory distress who are placed on ventilators have intentionally lowered tidal and minute volumes to protect the lungs against mechanical damage (810). This leads to an increase in paCO2. This protective ventilation strategy is termed “permissive hypercapnia.” In addition to reducing ventilator-associated lung injury, permissive hypercapnia has been demonstrated to decrease mortality in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients (11,12).

The NF-κB family of transcription factors is responsible for the regulation of innate immune, inflammatory, and anti-apoptotic gene expression. We have previously demonstrated a link between hypercapnia and NF-κB signaling (15). Elevated CO2 leads to a less inflammatory phenotype via the suppression of NF-κB-dependent proinflammatory gene expression (10).

In this study, we demonstrate that under conditions of elevated CO2, RelB is cleaved to a low molecular weight form that translocates to the nucleus, where it impacts upon the expression of proinflammatory genes. We dissected the relative contribution of CO2 and pH to RelB processing and inflammatory gene expression. Furthermore, we investigated the requirement of RelB for the suppression of specific inflammatory gene expression under conditions of elevated CO2. Finally, we provide mechanistic insight into RelB processing in response to CO2.

Taken together, these studies indicate that CO2 is a physiologic regulator of inflammatory gene expression and that non-canonical NF-κB family members are key to mediating the anti-inflammatory effects of CO2.

Arterial levels of CO2 can range from ~25 mm Hg (~3.6%) to >100 mm Hg (~13%) in pathophysiologic states. To determine the range of sensitivity of RelB to CO2, we exposed MEFs to 2% or 10% CO2 for 1 h before re-equilibration to 0.03% CO2 conditions for 5 min in each case. We observed a dose-dependent nuclear accumulation of RelB at 2% CO2, which was significantly more pronounced at 10% CO2 (Fig. 2A). Furthermore, return to ambient CO2 levels resulted in a rapid reversal of nuclear RelB localization (Fig. 2A), confirming that the impact of elevated CO2 on RelB is both rapid and reversible.

Hypercapnia is usually accompanied by acidosis in vivo. This is because CO2 forms carbonic acid in solution, leading to a cellular microenvironment that is both hypercapnic and acidic.

Leukocyte nuclear RelB staining in lungs from LPS-treated rats was significantly increased in the 5% CO2 group compared with the 0% CO2 group (Fig. 3, B and C). This enhanced nuclear RelB staining in the therapeutic hypercapnic acidosis group is associated with better survival, improved lung function, and a significant degree of lung protection as a consequence of reduced inflammatory damage (28). These data provide further supportive evidence for RelB nuclear localization under conditions of hypercapnia both in vivo and in vitro and demonstrate a correlation between nuclear RelB expression and improved disease outcome.

Under both neutral and acidic conditions, elevated CO2 suppressed TNFα to the same degree (Fig. 4A), indicating that the effects of elevated CO2 on inflammatory gene expression are independent of alterations in pHe. Thus, exposure to hypercapnia suppresses TNFα-stimulated inflammatory gene expression. Consistent with our previous studies (15), buffering pHe to a neutral value did not affect the suppressive effects of elevated CO2.

In summary, elevated CO2 suppresses cytokine-stimulated inflammatory gene expression, and this suppression is modestly enhanced in cells in which RelB expression is suppressed. Although the specific mechanism remains to be determined, these data support a role for RelB in the regulation of inflammatory gene expression under conditions of hypercapnia.

Hypercapnia is defined as the situation that arises when blood pCO2 is higher than normal. It is associated with a range of diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and is a clinically tolerated consequence of a low tidal volume ventilation strategy for acute respiratory distress syndrome (6). Low tidal volume ventilation strategies have come to prominence given the significant decrease in patient mortality seen with this approach compared with the traditional ventilation strategy in a large multicenter trial (12).

RelB is an NF-κB family member that, along with p52, forms the characteristic dimer of the non-canonical pathway. Knockdown of RelB has previously been demonstrated to impair cellular immunity and to lead to multi-organ inflammation (20), suggesting an anti-inflammatory role for RelB. In addition, RelB acts downstream of signaling molecules previously shown to be involved in CO2signaling.

In summary, we have identified a novel signaling event in which RelB becomes cleaved and localizes to the nucleus under conditions of hypercapnia and hypercapnic acidosis in vitro and is associated with improved outcome in an in vivo model of LPS-induced lung injury. Hypercapnia can influence ligand-induced NF-κB target gene expression independently of pHe. Hypercapnia-dependent RelB processing and localization are sensitive to MG-132 but do not involve GSK3β or MALT-1, as has been described in other models (23). Taken together, they provide new mechanistic insight into the molecular mechanisms underpinning CO2 signaling, with significant implications for clinical medicine.

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Pain

Svært viktig studie med alt om smerte, fra Melzaks Body-Self Neuromatrix. Smerteforståelsens historie, fantomsmerter, hypersensitivitet, nervedegenerasjon, betennelser, Gate Control og Neuromatrix teori, m.m. Her forklares hvordan kroppsopplevelsen skapes i hjernen, selv uten noen input fra kroppen. Nevner også at smerte kan sette seg som et minne; somatic memory. Og vier mye plass til hvordan stress og kortisol bidrar til kroniske smerter, muskelsvikt og nedsatt immunsystem.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcs.1201/full

Smerte har en funksjon i menneskekroppen som har utviklet seg i evolusjonen for å holde oss i live. Det gjør at vi tilpasser vår aktivitet så kroppen kan fokusere på helbredelse.

Pain has many valuable functions. It often signals injury or disease, generates a wide range of adaptive behaviors, and promotes healing through rest.

Men de siste 100-årenes (og foreløpige) forståelse av selve årsaken til smerte, hvordan den oppstår og hvordan den forsvinner, er basert på et mekanisk kroppsbilde som ikke tar hensyn til den subjektive smerteopplevelse. Melsaks arbeid viser oss hvordan vi snur dette og får en bedre og mer korrekt forståelse av smertefunksjonen:

Pain is a personal, subjective experience influenced by cultural learning, the meaning of the situation, attention, and other psychological variables. Pain processes do not begin with the stimulation of receptors. Rather, injury or disease produces neural signals that enter an active nervous system that (in the adult organism) is the substrate of past experience, culture, and a host of other environmental and personal factors.

Pain is not simply the end product of a linear sensory transmission system; it is a dynamic process that involves continuous interactions among complex ascending and descending systems. The neuromatrix theory guides us away from the Cartesian concept of pain as a sensation produced by injury, inflammation, or other tissue pathology and toward the concept of pain as a multidimensional experience produced by multiple influences.

Smerte er en helbredelsesfunksjon. Den hjelper oss å unngå truende situasjoner og sørger for at vi gir kroppen mulighet til å helbrede seg. Det er en naturlig og intelligent biologisk funksjon som i milliarder av år igjennom evolusjonen har sørget for at vi overlever så lenge som mulig.

We all know that pain has many valuable functions. It often signals injury or disease and generates a wide range of behaviors to end it and to treat its causes. Chest pain, for example, may be a symptom of heart disease, and may compel us to seek a physician’s help. Memories of past pain and suffering also serve as signals for us to avoid potentially dangerous situations. Yet another beneficial effect of pain, notably after serious injury or disease, is to make us rest, thereby promoting the body’s healing processes. All of these actions induced by pain—to escape, avoid, or rest—have obvious value for survival.

Smerteproblematikk har eksplodert de siste 20-30 årene og korsryggsmerter har overtatt plassen fra sult som den viktigste årsaken til ubehag blandt verdens befolkning. Melzak foreslår at vi bør se på kronisk smerte som en sykdom i seg selv, ikke som et symptom. En sykdom som følge av at nervesystemets alarm-mekanismer har slått seg vrang.

The pain, not the physical impairment, prevents them from leading a normal life. Likewise, most backaches, headaches, muscle pains, nerve pains, pelvic pains, and facial pains serve no discernible purpose, are resistant to treatment, and are a catastrophe for the people who are afflicted.

Pain may be the warning signal that saves the lives of some people, but it destroys the lives of countless others. Chronic pains, clearly, are not a warning to prevent physical injury or disease. They are the disease—the result of neural mechanisms gone awry.1–3

A BRIEF HISTORY OF PAIN

I smerteforskning og forståelse har vi, siden Descartes tid på 1600-tallet, beveget oss fra utsiden av kroppen igjennom det vi trodde var smerte-nervetråder, inn til ryggmargens «Gate Control», og nå, med The Neuromatrix, kommet opp til selve hjernen hvor vår opplevde virkelighet faktisk skapes. Først nå de siste årene har vi begynt å inkludere hjernens forskjellige funksjoner og dens eget «bilde» og opplevelse av kroppen. Tidligere ville pasienter som ikke ble bedre av kirurgi eller behandling bare bli avfeid av legene og heller sent til psykolog, hvor de heller ikke fikk noe spesifikk hjelp for smertene. Først nå, endelig, kan behandling av kronisk smerte inkludere større deler av mennesket som stemmer bedre overens med realiteten i både den subjektive opplevelsen og den vitenskapelige forklaringsmodellen.

The theory of pain we inherited in the 20th century was proposed by Descartes three centuries earlier. The impact of Descartes’ specificity theory was enormous. It influenced experiments on the anatomy and physiology of pain up to the first half of the 20th century (reviewed in Ref 4). This body of research is marked by a search for specific pain fibers and pathways and a pain center in the brain. The result was a concept of pain as a specific, direct-line sensory projection system. This rigid anatomy of pain in the 1950s led to attempts to treat severe chronic pain by a variety of neurosurgical lesions. Descartes’ specificity theory, then, determined the ‘facts’ as they were known up to the middle of the 20th century, and even determined therapy.

Specificity theory proposed that injury activates specific pain receptors and fibers which, in turn, project pain impulses through a spinal pain pathway to a pain center in the brain. The psychological experience of pain, therefore, was virtually equated with peripheral injury. In the 1950s, there was no room for psychological contributions to pain, such as attention, past experience, anxiety, depression, and the meaning of the situation.

Patients who suffered back pain without presenting signs of organic disease were often labeled as psychologically disturbed and sent to psychiatrists. 

However, in none of these theories was there an explicit role for the brain other than as a passive receiver of messages. Nevertheless, the successive theoretical concepts moved the field in the right direction: into the spinal cord and away from the periphery as the exclusive answer to pain. At least the field of pain was making its way up toward the brain.

gatecontrolltheory

(D) Gate control theory. The large (L) and small (S) fibers project to the substantia gelatinosa (SG) and first central transmission (T) cells. The central control trigger is represented by a line running from the large fiber system to central control mechanisms, which in turn project back to the gate control system. The T cells project to the entry cells of the action system. +, excitation; −, inhibition.

THE GATE CONTROL THEORY OF PAIN

The Gate Control beskriver hvordan stimulering av store nervefibre, f.eks. å blåse på sår, stryke på huden, osv., (mekanoreseptorer i huden) kan overdøve smertesignalene som kommer fra små nervefibre (nociceptive C-fibre). Gate Control teorien var den første som viste hvordan sentralnervesystemet kunne nedregulere smerte ovenifra og ned. Som inkluderer hjernens respons på signalene fra kroppen.

The final model, depicted in Figure 1(d), is the first theory of pain to incorporate the central control processes of the brain.

The gate control theory of pain11 proposed that the transmission of nerve impulses from afferent fibers to spinal cord transmission (T) cells is modulated by a gating mechanism in the spinal dorsal horn. This gating mechanism is influenced by the relative amount of activity in large- and small-diameter fibers, so that large fibers tend to inhibit transmission (close the gate) while small-fibers tend to facilitate transmission (open the gate).

When the output of the spinal T cells exceeds a critical level, it activates the Action System—those neural areas that underlie the complex, sequential patterns of behavior and experience characteristic of pain.

Psychological factors, which were previously dismissed as ‘reactions to pain’, were now seen to be an integral part of pain processing and new avenues for pain control by psychological therapies were opened.

BEYOND THE GATE

We believe the great challenge ahead of us is to understand brain function. Melzack and Casey13 made a start by proposing that specialized systems in the brain are involved in the sensory-discriminative, motivational-affective and cognitive-evaluative dimensions of subjective pain experience (Figure 2).

neuromatrixtheory

Figure 2. Conceptual model of the sensory, motivational, and central control determinants of pain. The output of the T (transmission) cells of the gate control system projects to the sensory-discriminative system and the motivational-affective system. The central control trigger is represented by a line running from the large fiber system to central control processes; these, in turn, project back to the gate control system, and to the sensory-discriminative and motivational-affective systems. All three systems interact with one another, and project to the motor system.

The newest version, the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2,16 was designed to measure the qualities of both neuropathic and non-neuropathic pain in research and clinical settings.

In 1978, Melzack and Loeser17 described severe pains in the phantom body of paraplegic patients with verified total sections of the spinal cord, and proposed a central ‘pattern generating mechanism’ above the level of the section. This concept represented a revolutionary advance: it did not merely extend the gate; it said that pain could be generated by brain mechanisms in paraplegic patients in the absence of a spinal gate because the brain is completely disconnected from the cord. Psychophysical specificity, in such a concept, makes no sense; instead we must explore how patterns of nerve impulses generated in the brain can give rise to somesthetic experience.

Phantom Limbs and the Concept of a Neuromatrix

But there is a set of observations on pain in paraplegic patients that just does not fit the theory. This does not negate the gate theory, of course. Peripheral and spinal processes are obviously an important part of pain and we need to know more about the mechanisms of peripheral inflammation, spinal modulation, midbrain descending control, and so forth. But the data on painful phantoms below the level of total spinal cord section18,19 indicate that we need to go above the spinal cord and into the brain.

The cortex, Gybels and Tasker made amply clear, is not the pain center and neither is the thalamus.20 The areas of the brain involved in pain experience and behavior must include somatosensory projections as well as the limbic system.

First, because the phantom limb feels so real, it is reasonable to conclude that the body we normally feel is subserved by the same neural processes in the brain as the phantom; these brain processes are normally activated and modulated by inputs from the body but they can act in the absence of any inputs.

Second, all the qualities of experience we normally feel from the body, including pain, are also felt in the absence of inputs from the body; from this we may conclude that the origins of the patterns of experience lie in neural networks in the brain; stimuli may trigger the patterns but do not produce them.

Third, the body is perceived as a unity and is identified as the ‘self’, distinct from other people and the surrounding world. The experience of a unity of such diverse feelings, including the self as the point of orientation in the surrounding environment, is produced by central neural processes and cannot derive from the peripheral nervous system or spinal cord.

Fourth, the brain processes that underlie the body-self are ‘built-in’ by genetic specification, although this built-in substrate must, of course, be modified by experience, including social learning and cultural influences. These conclusions provide the basis of the conceptual model18,19,21 depicted in Figure 3.

bodyselfneuromatrix

Figure 3. Factors that contribute to the patterns of activity generated by the body-self neuromatrix, which is comprised of sensory, affective, and cognitive neuromodules. The output patterns from the neuromatrix produce the multiple dimensions of pain experience, as well as concurrent homeostatic and behavioral responses.

Outline of the Theory

The anatomical substrate of the body-self is a large, widespread network of neurons that consists of loops between the thalamus and cortex as well as between the cortex and limbic system.18,19,21 The entire network, whose spatial distribution and synaptic links are initially determined genetically and are later sculpted by sensory inputs, is a neuromatrix. The loops diverge to permit parallel processing in different components of the neuromatrix and converge repeatedly to permit interactions between the output products of processing. The repeated cyclical processing and synthesis of nerve impulses through the neuromatrix imparts a characteristic pattern: the neurosignature. The neurosignature of the neuromatrix is imparted on all nerve impulse patterns that flow through it; the neurosignature is produced by the patterns of synaptic connections in the entire neuromatrix.

The neurosignature, which is a continuous output from the body-self neuromatrix, is projected to areas in the brain—the sentient neural hub—in which the stream of nerve impulses (the neurosignature modulated by ongoing inputs) is converted into a continually changing stream of awareness. Furthermore, the neurosignature patterns may also activate a second neuromatrix to produce movement, the action-neuromatrix .

The Body-Self Neuromatrix

The neuromatrix (not the stimulus, peripheral nerves or ‘brain center’) is the origin of the neurosignature; the neurosignature originates and takes form in the neuromatrix. Though the neurosignature may be activated or modulated by input, the input is only a ‘trigger’ and does not produce the neurosignature itself. The neuromatrix ‘casts’ its distinctive signature on all inputs (nerve impulse patterns) which flow through it.

The neuromatrix, distributed throughout many areas of the brain, comprises a widespread network of neurons which generates patterns, processes information that flows through it, and ultimately produces the pattern that is felt as a whole body.

Conceptual Reasons for a Neuromatrix

It is difficult to comprehend how individual bits of information from skin, joints, or muscles can all come together to produce the experience of a coherent, articulated body. At any instant in time, millions of nerve impulses arrive at the brain from all the body’s sensory systems, including the proprioceptive and vestibular systems. How can all this be integrated in a constantly changing unity of experience? Where does it all come together?

The neuromatrix, then, is a template of the whole, which provides the characteristic neural pattern for the whole body (the body’s neurosignature) as well as subsets of signature patterns (from neuromodules) that relate to events at (or in) different parts of the body

Alle har sett filmen The Matrix, sant? Spesielt scenen med «the spoonboy» er magisk: «Do not try to bend the spoon. That is impossible. Instead… only try to realize the truth» Neo: «What truth?». Spoonboy: «There is no spoon». Neo: «There is no spoon?». Spoonboy: «Then you´ll see, that it is not the spoon that bends, it is only your self». Dette har en direkte relasjon til smerteopplevelsen. Melzack forklarer:

Pain is not injury; the quality of pain experiences must not be confused with the physical event of breaking skin or bone. Warmth and cold are not ‘out there’; temperature changes occur ‘out there’, but the qualities of experience must be generated by structures in the brain. There are no external equivalents to stinging, smarting, tickling, itch; the qualities are produced by built-in neuromodules whose neurosignatures innately produce the qualities.

We do not learn to feel qualities of experience: our brains are built to produce them.

When all sensory systems are intact, inputs modulate the continuous neuromatrix output to produce the wide variety of experiences we feel. We may feel position, warmth, and several kinds of pain and pressure all at once. It is a single unitary feeling just as an orchestra produces a single unitary sound at any moment even though the sound comprises violins, cellos, horns, and so forth.

The experience of the body-self involves multiple dimensions—sensory, affective, evaluative, postural and many others.

To use a musical analogy once again, it is like the strings, tympani, woodwinds and brasses of a symphony orchestra which each comprise a part of the whole; each makes its unique contribution yet is an integral part of a single symphony which varies continually from beginning to end.

Action Patterns: The Action-Neuromatrix

The output of the body neuromatrix is directed at two systems: (1) the neuromatrix that produces awareness of the output, and (2) a neuromatrix involved in overt action patterns. Just as there is a steady stream of awareness, there is also a steady output of behavior (including movements during sleep).

It is important to recognize that behavior occurs only after the input has been at least partially synthesized and recognized. For example, when we respond to the experience of pain or itch, it is evident that the experience has been synthesized by the body-self neuromatrix (or relevant neuromodules) sufficiently for the neuromatrix to have imparted the neurosignature patterns that underlie the quality of experience, affect and meaning. Most behavior occurs only after inputs have been analyzed and synthesized sufficiently to produce meaningful experience.

When we reach for an apple, the visual input has clearly been synthesized by a neuromatrix so that it has 3-dimensional shape, color and meaning as an edible, desirable object, all of which are produced by the brain and are not in the object ‘out there’. When we respond to pain (by withdrawal or even by telephoning for an ambulance), we respond to an experience that has sensory qualities, affect and meaning as a dangerous (or potentially dangerous) event to the body.

After inputs from the body undergo transformation in the body-neuromatrix, the appropriate action patterns are activated concurrently (or nearly so) with the neuromatrix for experience. Thus, in the action-neuromatrix, cyclical processing and synthesis produces activation of several possible patterns, and their successive elimination, until one particular pattern emerges as the most appropriate for the circumstances at the moment. In this way, input and output are synthesized simultaneously, in parallel, not in series. This permits a smooth, continuous stream of action patterns.

Another entrenched assumption is that perception of one’s body results from sensory inputs that leave a memory in the brain; the total of these signals becomes the body image. But the existence of phantoms in people born without a limb or who have lost a limb at an early age suggests that the neural networks for perceiving the body and its parts are built into the brain.18,19,27,28

Phantoms become comprehensible once we recognize that the brain generates the experience of the body. Sensory inputs merely modulate that experience; they do not directly cause it.

Pain and Neuroplasticity

Plasticity related to pain represents persistent functional changes, or ‘somatic memories,’29–31 produced in the nervous system by injuries or other pathological events.

Denervation Hypersensitivity and Neuronal Hyperactivity

Clinical neurosurgery studies reveal a similar relationship between denervation and CNS hyperactivity. Neurons in the somatosensory thalamus of patients with neuropathic pain display high spontaneous firing rates, abnormal bursting activity, and evoked responses to stimulation of body areas that normally do not activate these neurons.34,35

Furthermore, in patients with neuropathic pain, electrical stimulation of subthalamic, thalamic and capsular regions may evoke pain36 and in some instances even reproduce the patient’s pain.37–39

It is possible that receptive field expansions and spontaneous activity generated in the CNS following peripheral nerve injury are, in part, mediated by alterations in normal inhibitory processes in the dorsal horn. Within four days of a peripheral nerve section there is a reduction in the dorsal root potential, and therefore, in the presynaptic inhibition it represents.40 Nerve section also induces a reduction in the inhibitory effect of A-fiber stimulation on activity in dorsal horn neurons.41

The fact that amputees are more likely to develop phantom limb pain if there is pain in the limb prior to amputation30 raises the possibility that the development of longer term neuropathic pain also can be prevented by reducing the potential for central sensitization at the time of amputation.52,53

Pain and Psychopathology

Pain that is ‘nonanatomical’ in distribution, spread of pain to non-injured territory, pain that is said to be out of proportion to the degree of injury, and pain in the absence of injury have all, at one time or another, been used as evidence to support the idea that psychological disturbance underlies the pain. Yet each of these features of supposed psychopathology can now be explained by neurophysiological mechanisms that involve an interplay between peripheral and central neural activity.4,60

This raises the intriguing possibility that the intensity of pain at the site of an injury may be facilitated by contralateral neurite loss induced by the ipsilateral injury68—a situation that most clinicians would never have imagined possible.

Taken together, these novel mechanisms that explain some of the most puzzling pain symptoms must keep us mindful that emotional distress and psychological disturbance in our patients are not at the root of the pain. In fact, more often than not, prolonged pain is the cause of distress, anxiety, and depression.

Attributing pain to a psychological disturbance is damaging to the patient and provider alike; it poisons the patient-provider relationship by introducing an element of mutual distrust and implicit (and at times, explicit) blame. It is devastating to the patient who feels at fault, disbelieved and alone.

Pain and Stress

We are so accustomed to considering pain as a purely sensory phenomenon that we have ignored the obvious fact that injury does not merely produce pain; it also disrupts the brain’s homeostatic regulation systems, thereby producing ‘stress’ and initiating complex programs to reinstate homeostasis. By recognizing the role of the stress system in pain processes, we discover that the scope of the puzzle of pain is vastly expanded and new pieces of the puzzle provide valuable clues in our quest to understand chronic pain.69

However, it is important for the purpose of understanding pain to keep in mind that stress involves a biological system that is activated by physical injury, infection, or any threat to biological homeostasis, as well as by psychological threat and insult of the body-self.

When injury occurs, sensory information rapidly alerts the brain and begins the complex sequence of events to re-establish homeostasis. Cytokines are released within seconds after injury. These substances, such as gamma-interferon, interleukins 1 and 6, and tumor necrosis factor, enter the bloodstream within 1–4 min and travel to the brain. The cytokines, therefore, are able to activate fibers that send messages to the brain and, concurrently, to breach the blood–brain barrier at specific sites and have an immediate effect on hypothalamic cells. The cytokines together with evaluative information from the brain rapidly begin a sequence of activities aimed at the release and utilization of glucose for necessary actions, such as removal of debris, the repair of tissues, and (sometimes) fever to destroy bacteria and other foreign substances. Following severe injury, the noradrenergic system is activated: epinephrine is released into the blood stream and the powerful locus coeruleus/norepinephrine system in the brainstem projects information upward throughout the brain and downward through the descending efferent sympathetic nervous system. Thus, the whole sympathetic system is activated to produce readiness of the heart, blood vessels, and other viscera for complex programs to reinstate homeostasis.70,71

At the same time, the perception of injury activates the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) system and the release of cortisol from the adrenal cortex, which inevitably plays a powerful role in determining chronic pain. Cortisol also acts on the immune system and the endogeneous opioid system. Although these opioids are released within minutes, their initial function may be simply to inhibit or modulate the release of cortisol. Experiments with animals suggest that their analgesic effects may not appear until as long as 30 min after injury.

Cortisol is an essential hormone for survival because it is responsible for producing and maintaining high levels of glucose for rapid response after injury or major threat. However, cortisol is potentially a highly destructive substance because, to ensure a high level of glucose, it breaks down the protein in muscle and inhibits the ongoing replacement of calcium in bone. Sustained cortisol release, therefore, can produce myopathy, weakness, fatigue, and decalcification of bone. It can also accelerate neural degeneration of the hippocampus during aging. Furthermore, it suppresses the immune system.

Estrogen increases the release of peripheral cytokines, such as gamma-interferon, which in turn produce increased cortisol. This may explain why more females than males suffer from most kinds of chronic pain as well as painful autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis and lupus.72

Some forms of chronic pain may occur as a result of the cumulative destructive effect of cortisol on muscle, bone, and neural tissue. Furthermore, loss of fibers in the hippocampus due to aging reduces a natural brake on cortisol release which is normally exerted by the hippocampus. As a result, cortisol is released in larger amounts, producing a greater loss of hippocampal fibers and a cascading deleterious effect

The cortisol output by itself may not be sufficient to cause any of these problems, but rather provides the conditions so that other contributing factors may, all together, produce them. 

The fact that several autoimmune diseases are also classified as chronic pain syndromes—such as Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, scleroderma, and lupus—suggests that the study of these syndromes in relation to stress effects and chronic pain could be fruitful. Immune suppression, which involves prolonging the presence of dead tissue, invading bacteria, and viruses, could produce a greater output of cytokines, with a consequent increase in cortisol and its destructive effects.

In some instances, pain itself may serve as a traumatic stressor.

Phantom Limb Pain

The cramping pain, however, may be due to messages from the action-neuromodule to move muscles in order to produce movement. In the absence of the limbs, the messages to move the muscles become more frequent and ‘stronger’ in the attempt to move the limb. The end result of the output message may be felt as cramping muscle pain. Shooting pains may have a similar origin, in which action-neuromodules attempt to move the body and send out abnormal patterns that are felt as shooting pain. The origins of these pains, then, lie in the brain.

Low-Back Pain

Protruding discs, arthritis of vertebral joints, tumors, and fractures are known to cause low back pain. However, about 60–70% of patients who suffer severe low back pain show no evidence of disc disease, arthritis, or any other symptoms that can be considered the cause of the pain. Even when there are clear-cut physical and neurological signs of disc herniation (in which the disc pushes out of its space and presses against nerve roots), surgery produces complete relief of back pain and related sciatic pain in only about 60% of cases.

A high proportion of cases of chronic back pain may be due to more subtle causes. The perpetual stresses and strains on the vertebral column (at discs and adjacent structures called facet joints) produce an increase in small blood vessels and fibrous tissue in the area.78 As a result, there is a release of substances that are known to produce inflammation and pain into local tissues and the blood stream; this whole stress cascade may be triggered repeatedly. The effect of stress-produced substances—such as cortisol and norepinephrine—at sites of minor lesions and inflammation could, if it occurs often and is prolonged, activate a neuromatrix program that anticipates increasingly severe damage and attempts to counteract it.

Fibromyalgia

An understanding of fibromyalgia has eluded us because we have failed to recognize the role of stress mechanisms in addition to the obvious sensory manifestations which have dominated research and hypotheses about the nature of fibromyalgia. Melzack’s interpretation of the available evidence is that the body-self neuromatrix’s response to stressful events fails to turn off when the stressor diminishes, so that the neuromatrix maintains a continuous state of alertness to threat. It is possible that this readiness for action produces fatigue in muscles, comparable to the fatigue felt by paraplegics in their phantom legs when they spontaneously make cycling movements.24 It is also possible that the prolonged tension maintained in particular sets of muscles produces the characteristic pattern of tender spots.

The persistent low-level stress (i.e., the failure of the stress response to cease) would produce anomalous alpha waves during deep sleep, greater feelings of fatigue, higher generalized sensitivity to all sensory inputs, and a low-level, sustained output of the stress-regulation system, reflected in a depletion of circulating cortisol.

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Vascular Fasciatherapy Danis Bois Method: a Study on Mechanism Concerning the Supporting Point Applied on Arteries

Studie som nevner svært mye interessant om blodsirkulasjon, tensegritet og om bindevev. Den er rettet mot en spesifikk metode for spontan bevegelse, men har mye interessante teamer som gjelder andre bodyworkmetoder også.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3242644/

«Vascular research especially made a jump forward with the Nobel Prize awarded to Furchgott, Ignarro and Murad for having discovered the endogenous production of nitric oxide (NO). »

«Mesenchyme differentiates and generates every type of connective tissue and many organs in adults(3) including bone, muscle, and the middle layer of the skin, excepting nervous tissue and the digestive track(7).»

«In this study, one can notice that they are totally or partially at the origin of vascular endothelium and mesothelium (peritoneum, pleura, pericardium)(6). And this vascular endothelium is the origin of blood, which is also considered as specialized connective tissue(6).»

Forskjellen mellom arterier og kapillærer:
«Capillaries have the function of distributing blood in the body, bringing about an exchange between blood and tissues. Structurally, arteries carry and separate blood and tissues.»

«Fascia is a very sensitive tissue that detects any kind of stress — physical, emotional or psycho-social. It reacts by contracting and imprisoning the organs it covers, thus impairing their physiological functions. Furthermore, the tightening of their connective parts induces a perceptible disturbance in mobility and rhythm of these organs.»

«ECs respond to increased blood flow by causing relaxation of the surrounding VSMCs. VSMC relaxation in response to flow occurs over seconds to minutes and if high flow persists, remodeling of the artery wall enlarges the lumen over time in a period of weeks to months(36). Decreased flow induces vessel narrowing(37), and extreme low flow may lead to complete vessel regression, which involves apoptosis of the ECs(38).»

«The human body seems to be made of the only and same tissue which is functionally differentiated: there are only tissue connections, simply a histological continuum without any clear separation between the skin and hypodermis, the vessels, the aponeurosis, and the muscles(46). So connective tissue, its cells, MEC, and fibers are an obvious link in this construction.»

«The theory of tensegrity emerged from the interests of architects (from Richard Buckminster Fuller to Rene Motro) and biologists (Donald Ingber(47)), and their meeting point of connection with our discussion can be found in these definitions: “a type of prestressed structural network, composed of opposing tension and compression elements that self-stabilizes its shape through establishment of a mechanical force balance”, and “tensegrity is used to stabilize the shape of living cells, tissue and organs, as well as our whole bodies”(4). Hence, the use of this architectural system for structural organization provides a mechanism to physically integrate part and whole(4).»

«Arteries have a special relation with fascias. Connective tissue is present in the three tunics of the artery. Adventitia is a typical sheathing fascia, which becomes tense in reaction to stress. Media is an association of muscle and connective tissue reacting to local mechanical variations (i.e. blood pressure) or general influence (i.e. stress) by tensing and/or by contracting. Intima, whose endothelium can be assimilated to a very big autocrine/paracrine formation(48)reacting mainly to the influence of blood qualities (i.e. type of flow, components), lies on a connective layer underlining endothelium.»

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Etiology of Myofascial Trigger Points

Om triggerpunkter og hvordan muskelspenninger gir oksygenmangel som så fører til melkesyreopphopning. Nevner også at capillærer trekker seg sammen. En annen studie som det refereres til viser bilder og grafer av hvordan dette skjer; økt blodoppsamling pga trange kapillære vener der blodet strømmer ut fra triggerpunktet.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3440564/#__ffn_sectitle

«Since the capillary blood pressure ranges from approximately 35 mm Hg at the beginning (arterial side) to 15 mm Hg at the end of the capillary beds (venous side), the capillary blood flow is temporarily obstructed during muscle contractions. The blood flow recovers immediately with relaxation, which is consistent with its normal physiological mechanism. In dynamic rhythmic contractions, intramuscular blood flow is enhanced by this contraction-relaxation rhythm, also known as the muscular pump. During sustained muscle contractions, however, muscle metabolism is highly dependent upon oxygen and glucose, which are in short supply.»

«Since oxygen and glucose are required for the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which provides the energy needed for muscle contractions, sustained contractions may cause a local energy crisis due to the lack of oxygen. To guarantee an adequate supply of ATP, the muscle can switch within a few seconds to anaerobic glycolysis. »

«Under anaerobic circumstances, however, most of the pyruvic acid produced during glycolysis is converted into lactic acid, thereby increasing the intramuscular acidity (pH). Most of the lactic acid diffuses out of the muscle into the bloodstream; post-exercise lactic acid is washed out within 30 minutes after exercise. Unfortunately, when the capillary circulation is restricted, as in sustained low-level contractions, this process comes to a standstill.»

«Small increases of the H+ concentration, as seen with inflammation, heavy muscle work, and ischemia, are sufficient to excite muscle group IV endings, contributing to mechanical hyperalgesia and central sensitization (15).»

«They identified 2 contributing factors, namely an increase in the volume of the vascular compartment, and an increased outflow resistance. Increased outflow resistance could be due to muscle contractures at the TrP that compress the capillary or venous bed. Sustained low-level contractions are common in the workplace where many occupations rely on prolonged postures, as seen in musicians, supermarket cashiers, computer operators, hairdressers, and dentists, among others.» Bilder ref til denne studies: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3493167/

«Hägg suggested that the continuous activity of these motor units in sustained contractions causes overuse muscle fiber damage, especially to the Type I fibers during low-level activities, which he summarized in his Cinderella hypothesis21. It is conceivable that in sustained low-level contractions and in dynamic repetitive contractions, ischemia, hypoxia and insufficient ATP synthesis in type I motor unit fibers are responsible for increasing acidity, Ca2+ accumulation, and subsequently sarcomere contracture. Furthermore, starting with the sarcomere (super-) contraction, the intramuscular perfusion slows down and ischemia and hypoxia will occur. This may lead to the release of several sensitizing substances causing peripheral sensitization15,22

«A key factor is the local ischemia, which leads to a lowered pH and a subsequent release of several inflammatory mediators in muscle tissue. Hocking proposed an interesting counterargument, which deserves further exploration. Whether overuse mechanisms are the crucial initiating factor or persistent nociceptive input remains a point of debate and further study.»

Forklaring på hva Hocking mener:
«Rather than looking at overuse mechanisms, Hocking maintains that persistent nociceptive input causes the formation of TrPs through central sensitization of the C-fiber nociceptive withdrawal reflex and plateau depolarization of withdrawal agonist alpha-motor neurons and compensatory reticulospinal motor facilitation of antigravity muscles and plateau depolarization of withdrawal antagonist alpha-motor neurons (33). «

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The effects of neurodynamic mobilization on fluid dispersion within the tibial nerve at the ankle: an unembalmed cadaveric study

Om hva nevropati og skader på nerver gjør, og hvordan neurodynamiske øvelser øker blodsirkulasjon internt i nerven. Nevner også hvordan skader, lav blodsirkulasjon og betennelser skaper sammensmeltninger i bindevevet mellom nerver og omliggende vev (muskler, skjelett, bindevev) som gjør at nervene ikke glir og dermed kan gi oss begrenset bevegelighet.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3172954/

«These disorders include compression syndromes or other neuromuscular conditions that may be accompanied by neuropathic pain. Damaged nerves exhibit predictable pathophysiological responses including impaired nerve mobility, increased mechanosensitivity, impaired nerve conduction, nerve tissue ischemia, axonal transport inhibition, and intraneural edema.

The following popper user interface control may not be accessible. Tab to the next button to revert the control to an accessible version.  Impaired nerve mobility and increased mechanosensitivity provide the basis for existing studies of neurodynamic techniques. »

«Impaired nerve mobility and mechanosensitivity can be clinically assessed by measuring changes in joint range of motion, pain reproduction, or change of symptoms following neurodynamic mobilization.

«Intraneural edema is a common response to nerve injury, and is intimately involved in the proliferation of damage to nerve structure and function.

The following popper user interface control may not be accessible. Tab to the next button to revert the control to an accessible version. Edema is found in peripheral nerves that have been subject to trauma such as compression,excessive tension events, or vibration.  Even mild injury may result in epineurial edema,  but compression that is prolonged or of great magnitude leads to a breach of the diffusion barriers created by both the perineurium and microvasculature, resulting in endoneurial edema. The absence of lymphatic vessels in the endoneurium limits drainage of this edema, thereby creating a ‘mini-compartment syndrome’ within the nerve. »

«This ‘mini-compartment syndrome’, due to the increase in endoneurial pressure, subsequently leads to fibrosis and adhesions, impairing intrafascicular gliding. This loss of intrafascicular gliding creates an internal stretch lesion (Fig. 1). »

«The results showed significant mobilization effects in that there was increased fluid dispersion within the tibial nerve after the intervention. »

…de brukte bare kadavere i denne studien.
«The results showed significant mobilization effects in that there was increased fluid dispersion within the tibial nerve after the intervention. Because the tibial nerve was dissected free of all adjacent tissue and eliminated any external interfaces, the response to the mobilization appeared to be due to intraneural mechanics.»

Bevegelsene «pumper» internt i nerven og øker blodgjennomstreømning.
«During the mobilization technique, the tibial nerve alternately elongated and shortened which may have provided a temporary increase in intraneural pressure followed by a period of relaxation. Although speculative, it appears that this repetitive or ‘pumping’ action may have created a flushing of the dye and an alteration of the intraneural pressure as the intraneural fluid was dispersed.»

«In the early stages of stretch injury or compression, the ability to prevent or at least reduce edema may prevent or slow the inhibition of blood flow, thus preventing the sequelae leading to impaired axonal transport, demyelination, loss of elasticity due to fibrosis or adhesions, and ultimately to alteration in nerve structure and function. «

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Hypoxia-generated superoxide induces the development of the adhesion phenotype

Viktig studie om mekanismen bak hvordan hypoxi gir arrvev (adhesions) i kroppen. Relatert til hyperventilering vil lite CO2 gir hypoxi og sammen med trange blodkar vil de utsatte stedene i kroppen utvikle arrvev mellom muskler og nerver. Nevner hvordan antioksidanter er viktig for å unngå arrvev, spesielt etter operasjoner. Og motsatt, at oksidanter kan skape arrvev fra friskt vev. Nevner også hvordan nitratreaksjoner er med å skaper arrvev, så mulig at CO2 bidrar med å dempe nitratreaksjonene og dermed dempe dannelsen av arrvev. Den viser også at det kan være mulig å få arrvev celler om til å bli normale celler.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2574925/

«Adhesion fibroblasts exhibit higher TGF-β1 and type I collagen expression as compared to normal peritoneal broblasts. Furthermore, exposure of normal peritoneal fibroblasts to hypoxia results in an irreversible increase in TGF-β1 and type I collagen. We postulated that the mechanism by which hypoxia induced the adhesion phenotype is through the production of superoxide either directly or through the formation of peroxynitrite. »

«Hypoxia treatment resulted in a time-dependent increase in TGF-β1 and type I collagen mRNA levels in both normal peritoneal and adhesion fibroblasts.»

«In contrast, treatment with SOD, to scavenge endogenous superoxide, resulted in a decrease in TGF-β1 and type I collagen expression in adhesion fibroblasts to levels seen in normal peritoneal fibroblasts; no effect on the expression of these molecules was seen in normal peritoneal fibroblasts. »

«In conclusion, hypoxia, through the production of superoxide, causes normal peritoneal fibroblasts to acquire the adhesion phenotype. Scavenging superoxide, even in the presence of hypoxia, prevented the development of the adhesion phenotype. These findings further support the central role of free radicals in the development of adhesions.»

«Postoperative adhesions are a significant source of impaired organ functioning, decreased fertility, bowel obstruction, difficult reoperation, and possibly pain (1,2)

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Destroy user interface c»

«The processes that result in either normal peritoneal tissue repair or the development of adhesions include the migration, proliferation, and/or differentiation of several cell types, among them inflammatory, immune, mesothelial, and fibroblast cells (3)

«Hypoxia, resulting from tissue injury, has been suggested to play an important role in wound healing, and may therefore be a critical factor in the development of postoperative adhesions (4,7)

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Destroy user interface contrHypoxia is known to trigger the expression of TGF-β1, which consequently increases the expression of extracellular matrix proteins, including type I collagen (4) 

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Destroy user interface contr«Type I collagen synthesis has been shown to be crucially dependent on the availability of molecular oxygen in tissue culture, animal, and human wound healing experiments (8,9)

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Destroy user interface controlMoreover, exposure of normal peritoneal fibroblasts to hypoxia irreversibly induces TGF-β1 and type I collagen to levels seen in adhesion fibroblasts (4,10)

«Additionally, hypoxia is known to acutely promote superoxide (O2.−) generation from disparate intracellular sources that include xanthine dehydrogenase oxidase (11), mitochondrial electron transport chain (12), and NAD[P]H oxidase (13).

In biological systems, superoxide dismutase (SOD) protects against the deleterious actions of this radical by catalyzing its dismutation to hydrogen peroxide plus oxygen, (14) Whereas SOD breaks down O2.−, xanthine oxidase synthesizes O2.−. Xanthine oxidase appears to be one of the major superoxide-producing enzymes (14)«

«Scavenging superoxide restores both TGF-β1 and type I collagen mRNA levels in adhesion fibroblasts to levels observed in normal peritoneal fibroblasts»
«Normal peritoneal and adhesion fibroblasts treated with super-oxide dismutase, a O2.− scavenging enzyme, exhibited a dose–response decrease (0, 5, 10, 15, and 20 units/ml) in TGF-β1 and type I collagen mRNA levels in adhesion fibroblasts while not effecting normal peritoneal fibroblasts (Figs. 3A and B).»

«Scavenging superoxide during hypoxia exposure protects against the development of the adhesion phenotype»

«Peroxynitrite treatment increased the adhesion phenotype markers, TGF-β1 and type I collagen»

«Adhesion fibroblasts are myofibroblasts, defined as transiently activated fibroblasts exhibiting features intermediate between those of smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts, including the expression of α-SM actin (29,21) and a depleted antioxidant system (22). In normal wound healing, as the wound resolves, the cellularity decreases and the myofibroblasts disappear by apoptosis (23). However, in several pathological cases, including fibrosis, myofibroblastic differentiation persists and causes excessive scarring (24,25)

«This is further supported by the fact that when O2.− was scavenged, there was in a significant decrease in TGF-β1 and type I collagen in adhesion fibroblasts to levels seen in normal peritoneal fibroblasts. »

«Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are involved in TGF-β-stimulated collagen production in murine embryo fibroblasts (NIH3T3), and the effect of glutathione depletion on TGF-β-stimulated collagen production may be mediated by facilitating ROS signaling (37)

«Reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates control the synthesis of cytokines and growth factors in several in vitro models (40). For instance, they modulate the expression and/or release of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (41,42), tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin (IL)-1 (43,44), IL-8 (45,46), platelet-derived growth factor (47,48), and TGF-β1 (49). «

«Adhesion fibroblasts exhibited a significantly lower level of nitric oxide (NO) and higher protein nitration as compared to normal peritoneal fibroblasts, although there was no difference in the iNOS expression level between the two cell lines (17,50,51). This strongly indicates that adhesion fibroblasts use NO to form ONOO−, and consequently their basal ONOO− levels are higher than normal peritoneal fibroblasts. «

«Thus, treatment with SOD might affect the homeostasis of myofibroblasts by inducing cell death or the phenotypic reversion of myofibroblasts into normal fibroblasts. »

«Our results clearly indicate that hypoxia generated O2.− is a key player in the formation of the adhesion phenotype. This became evident when normal peritoneal fibroblasts were treated with SOD under hypoxic conditions and no change in adhesion markers was seen.»


«In this model, hypoxia-generated O2.− exerts its effect directly by enhancing the expression of TGF-β1, which consequently leads to elevated levels of type I collagen, a hallmark of the adhesion phenotype.»