Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is increasing. CAM includes mind-body interventions, biologically based therapies, energy therapies, and body-based methods. Primary brain tumors arise within the brain and have a poor prognosis when malignant. Even patients with benign tumors suffer neurologic and systemic symptoms as a result of the tumor or its treatment. CAM is used by 30% of brain tumor patients, who often do not report its use to their physician. Herbal medicines may affect the metabolism of prescribed medications or produce adverse effects that may be attributed to other causes. In patients with systemic cancer, mind-body modalities such as meditation and relaxation therapy have been shown to be helpful in reducing anxiety and pain; acupuncture and hypnotherapy may also reduce both pain and nausea. Recent preclinical studies have reported that ginseng, Scutellaria baicalensis, and Angelica sinensis may promote apoptosis of tumor cells or exercise antiangiogenic effects. Further studies are needed to evaluate the impact of CAM on symptom control or tumor growth in this vulnerable patient population.
...
PMID:Use of complementary and alternative medical therapy by patients with primary brain tumors. 1854 Nov 22

The focus of this work was to examine the potential role of p38 mitogen activated protein kinase (p38) in a mouse model of bone cancer (osteosarcoma) pain. To generate osteosarcoma and sham animals, osteosarcoma cells or medium were injected into the medullary canal of the femur. Initially, ipsilateral tactile allodynia was observed in both groups, but by 12 days post-surgery, thresholds in the sham group returned towards baseline while hypersensitivity in the osteosarcoma group lasted throughout the study. An increase in phosphorylated p38 was detected by western blotting in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and spinal cord day 14 after surgery. Immunohistochemistry showed that p38 was phosphorylated in DRG and spinal dorsal horn neurons at this time point. Two doses of a selective p38 inhibitor, SCIO-469, were administered in the chow starting 5 days post-surgery and continued throughout the study. Treatment with SCIO-469 led to a decrease in osteosarcoma-induced clinical score but had no effect on the allodynia. Bone erosion and tumor growth were also examined but no significant reduction of bone erosion or tumor growth was observed in the SCIO-469 treated mice. These data suggest that the p38 signaling pathway does not play a major role in bone cancer-mediated pain.
...
PMID:Role of p38 mitogen activated protein kinase in a model of osteosarcoma-induced pain. 1858 57

The femur bone cancer pain model was developed by implanting mouse osteolytic tumor cells (NCTC 2472) into the intramedulla of the femur in C3H/HeN mice. In vivo imaging analysis revealed that the implanted tumor cells grew progressively over 14 days. Associated with the tumor growth, guarding behavior, which was an indication of ongoing pain, time-dependently increased. Limb use abnormality and allodynia, which were indications of ambulatory and neuropathic pain, respectively, also appeared. The analgesic effects of oxycodone and other opioids, such as morphine and fentanyl, were evaluated at 14 days when all pain-related behaviors clearly appeared. Oxycodone (2-20 mg/kg, s.c.), morphine (10-50 mg/kg, s.c.) and fentanyl (0.05-0.2 mg/kg, s.c.) significantly reduced guarding behavior. Oxycodone (5-20 mg/kg, s.c.) and fentanyl (0.1 and 0.2 mg/kg, s.c.) significantly reversed limb use abnormality, but morphine (5-50 mg/kg, s.c.) did not. Moreover, oxycodone (5-20 mg/kg, s.c.) dose-dependently reversed allodynia without affecting the sham-treated mice. Morphine (50 mg/kg, s.c.) and fentanyl (0.075-0.2 mg/kg, s.c.) also reversed allodynia, but morphine (50 mg/kg, s.c.) tended to affect and fentanyl (0.1 and 0.2 mg/kg, s.c.) affected the withdrawal threshold in sham-treated mice. These results suggested that oxycodone relieved not only ongoing pain, but also ambulatory and neuropathic pain, and that the analgesic profile of oxycodone could be different from that of either morphine or fentanyl.
...
PMID:Oxycodone-induced analgesic effects in a bone cancer pain model in mice. 1875 99

Hospice care is designed to provide a variety of services, including pain and symptom management, to terminally ill patients. Although palliative radiotherapy (PRT) has been shown to be effective in reducing pain and other symptoms related to tumor growth, only a few hospice patients receive this therapy. This analysis identifies Medicare-certified freestanding hospices that report use of radiotherapy using Medicare's Healthcare Cost Report Information System (HCRIS) dataset. Any reported cost for radiotherapy services was used to indicate provision of PRT because of the population served. The relationship of provider characteristics (ownership, profit status, percent of patients with a cancer diagnosis, geographic location, and size) with provision of PRT was analyzed. Overall, 23.8% of Medicare-certified freestanding hospices in the study population provided radiotherapy services in fiscal year 2002. Provision of radiotherapy services was associated with larger size (measured by total number of hospice days reported in the HCRIS), longer length of Medicare certification, not-for-profit status, and a higher proportion of patients surviving more than seven days after admission. The finding that size, length of Medicare certification, and profit status are associated with provision of radiotherapy services lends credence to suggestions that current reimbursement practices discourage the use of PRT in hospice care, particularly for low-volume hospices.
J Pain Symptom Manage 2009 May
PMID:Palliative radiotherapy in Medicare-certified freestanding hospices. 1878 42

Cancer pain significantly affects the quality of cancer patients, and current treatments for this pain are limited. C-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) has been implicated in tumor growth and neuropathic pain sensitization. We investigated the role of JNK in cancer pain and tumor growth in a skin cancer pain model. Injection of luciferase-transfected B16-Fluc melanoma cells into a hindpaw of mouse induced robust tumor growth, as indicated by increase in paw volume and fluorescence intensity. Pain hypersensitivity in this model developed rapidly (<5 days) and reached a peak in 2 weeks, and was characterized by mechanical allodynia and heat hyperalgesia. Tumor growth was associated with JNK activation in tumor mass, dorsal root ganglion (DRG), and spinal cord and a peripheral neuropathy, such as loss of nerve fibers in the hindpaw skin and induction of ATF-3 expression in DRG neurons. Repeated systemic injections of D-JNKI-1 (6 mg/kg, i.p.), a selective and cell-permeable peptide inhibitor of JNK, produced an accumulative inhibition of mechanical allodynia and heat hyperalgesia. A bolus spinal injection of D-JNKI-1 also inhibited mechanical allodynia. Further, JNK inhibition suppressed tumor growth in vivo and melanoma cell proliferation in vitro. In contrast, repeated injections of morphine (5 mg/kg), a commonly used analgesic for terminal cancer, produced analgesic tolerance after 1 day and did not inhibit tumor growth. Our data reveal a marked peripheral neuropathy in this skin cancer model and important roles of the JNK pathway in cancer pain development and tumor growth. JNK inhibitors such as D-JNKI-1 may be used to treat cancer pain.
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of JNK with a peptide inhibitor attenuates pain hypersensitivity and tumor growth in a mouse skin cancer pain model. 1944 31

Pain is one of the most severe and debilitating symptoms associated with several forms of cancer. Various types of carcinomas and sarcomas metastasize to skeletal bones and cause spontaneous bone pain and hyperalgesia, which is accompanied by bone degradation and remodeling of peripheral nerves. Despite recent advances, the molecular mechanisms underlying the development and maintenance of cancer-evoked pain are not well understood. Several types of non-hematopoietic tumors secrete hematopoietic colony-stimulating factors that act on myeloid cells and tumor cells. Here we report that receptors and signaling mediators of granulocyte- and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factors (G-CSF and GM-CSF) are also functionally expressed on sensory nerves. GM-CSF sensitized nerves to mechanical stimuli in vitro and in vivo, potentiated CGRP release and caused sprouting of sensory nerve endings in the skin. Interruption of G-CSF and GM-CSF signaling in vivo led to reduced tumor growth and nerve remodeling, and abrogated bone cancer pain. The key significance of GM-CSF signaling in sensory neurons was revealed by an attenuation of tumor-evoked pain following a sensory nerve-specific knockdown of GM-CSF receptors. These results show that G-CSF and GM-CSF are important in tumor-nerve interactions and suggest that their receptors on primary afferent nerve fibers constitute potential therapeutic targets in cancer pain.
...
PMID:Hematopoietic colony-stimulating factors mediate tumor-nerve interactions and bone cancer pain. 1952 66

MnTE-2-PyP(5+) is a potent catalytic scavenger of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, primarily superoxide and peroxynitrite. It therefore not only attenuates primary oxidative damage, but was found to modulate redox-based signaling pathways (HIF-1alpha, NF-kappaB, SP-1, and AP-1) and thus, in turn, secondary oxidative injury also. Cancer has been widely considered an oxidative stress condition. The goal of this study was to prove if and why a catalytic SOD mimic/peroxynitrite scavenger would exert anti-cancer effects, i.e., to evaluate whether the attenuation of the oxidative stress by MnTE-2-PyP(5+) could suppress tumor growth in a 4T1 mouse breast tumor model. Tumor cells were implanted into Balb/C mouse flanks. Three groups of mice (n=25) were studied: control (PBS) and 2 and 15 mg/kg/day of MnTE-2-PyP(5+) given subcutaneously twice daily starting when the tumors averaged 200 mm(3) (until they reached approximately 5-fold the initial volume). Intratumoral hypoxia (pimonidazole, carbonic anhydrase), HIF-1alpha, VEGF, proliferating capillary index (CD105), microvessel density (CD31), protein nitration, DNA oxidation (8-OHdG), NADPH oxidase (Nox-4), apoptosis (CD31), macrophage infiltration (CD68), and tumor drug levels were assessed. With 2 mg/kg/day a trend toward tumor growth delay was observed, and a significant trend was observed with 15 mg/kg/day. The 7.5-fold increase in drug dose was accompanied by a similar (6-fold) increase in tumor drug levels. Oxidative stress was largely attenuated as observed through the decreased levels of DNA damage, protein 3-nitrotyrosine, macrophage infiltration, and NADPH oxidase. Further, hypoxia was significantly decreased as were the levels of HIF-1alpha and VEGF. Consequently, suppression of angiogenesis was observed; both the microvessel density and the endothelial cell proliferation were markedly decreased. Our study indicates for the first time that MnTE-2-PyP(5+) has anti-cancer activity in its own right. The anti-cancer activity via HIF/VEGF pathways probably arises from the impact of the drug on the oxidative stress. Therefore, the catalytic scavenging of ROS/RNS by antioxidants, which in turn suppresses cellular transcriptional activity, could be an appropriate strategy for anti-cancer therapy. Enhancement of the anti-cancer effects may be achieved by optimizing the dosing regime, utilizing more bioavailable Mn porphyrins (MnP), and combining MnP treatment with irradiation, hyperthermia, and chemotherapy. Mn porphyrins may be advantageous compared to other anti-cancer drugs, owing to their radioprotection of normal tissue and the ability to afford pain management in cancer patients via prevention of chronic morphine tolerance.
...
PMID:Antiangiogenic action of redox-modulating Mn(III) meso-tetrakis(N-ethylpyridinium-2-yl)porphyrin, MnTE-2-PyP(5+), via suppression of oxidative stress in a mouse model of breast tumor. 1959 20

Many of the same inflammatory factors that promote tumor growth are also hypothesized to function as pain modulators. There is substantial interindividual variation in pain severity in cancer patients. Therefore, we evaluated 59 single nucleotide polymorphisms in 37 inflammation genes in newly diagnosed non-Hispanic Caucasian lung cancer patients (n = 667) and assessed their association with pain severity. Patients rated their pain "during the past week" on an 11-point numeric scale (0 = "no pain" and 10 = "pain as bad as you can imagine") at presentation before initiating cancer therapy. Reported analgesic use was abstracted from charts and converted to morphine equivalent daily dose. Results showed that 16% of the patients reported severe pain (score > or = 7). Advanced stage of disease [odds ratio (OR), 2.34; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.50-3.65; P = 0.001], age < or = 50 years (OR, 2.10; 95% CI, 1.32-3.30; P = 0.002), reports of depressed mood (OR, 3.68; 95% CI, 1.96-6.93; P = 0.001), fatigue (OR, 3.72; 95% CI, 2.36-5.87; P = 0.001), and morphine equivalent daily dose (OR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.01-1.03) were significantly correlated with severe pain. Controlling for these nongenetic covariates, we found that patients with CC genotypes for PTGS2 exon10+837T>C (rs5275) were at lower risk for severe pain (OR, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.11-0.97) and an additive model for TNFalpha -308GA (rs1800629; OR, 1.67; 95% CI, 1.08-2.58) and NFKBIA Ex6+50C>T (rs8904) was predictive of severe pain (OR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.43-0.93). In a multigene analysis, we found a gene-dose effect, with each protective genotype reducing the risk for severe pain by as much as 38%. This study suggests the importance of inflammation gene polymorphisms in modulating pain severity. Additional studies are needed to validate our findings.
...
PMID:Role of inflammation gene polymorphisms on pain severity in lung cancer patients. 1977 51

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a key mediator of inflammation. Inhibitors of IL-6 or of its signal transducing receptor gp130 constitute a novel class of anti-inflammatory drugs, which raise great hopes for improved treatments of painful inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. IL-6 and gp130 may enhance pain not only indirectly through their proinflammatory actions but also through a direct action on nociceptors (i.e., on neurons activated by painful stimuli). We found indeed that the IL-6/gp130 ligand-receptor complex induced heat hypersensitivity both in vitro and in vivo. This process was mediated by activation of PKC-delta via Gab1/2/PI(3)K and subsequent regulation of TRPV1, a member of the transient receptor potential (TRP) family of ion channels. To assess the relevance of this direct pain promoting effect of IL-6, we generated conditional knock-out mice, which lack gp130 specifically in nociceptors, and tested them in models of inflammatory and tumor-induced pain. These mice showed significantly reduced levels of inflammatory and tumor-induced pain but no changes in immune reactions or tumor growth. Our results uncover the significance of gp130 expressed in peripheral pain sensing neurons in the pathophysiology of major clinical pain disorders and suggest their use as novel pain relieving agents in inflammatory and tumor pain.
...
PMID:A key role for gp130 expressed on peripheral sensory nerves in pathological pain. 1986 60

A 46-year-old male patient visited our hospital with the chief complaint of a right scrotal swelling and pain. The enlarged scrotum was 8 cm in diameter with redness of the skin of the right scrotum. There was a firm mass in the scrotum with marked tenderness. The patient's body temperature was 38.0C, and blood tests showed increased inflammatory markers. The results of computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging showed that the enlarged scrotum was filled with gas and there was a mass partially composed of fat inside it. The patient was treated with antibiotics, but the fever persisted and the inflammatory markers further increased. The size of the right scrotum gradually increased. A right high inguinal orchiectomy was performed to control the inflammation and makea diagnosis. Thehistopathological diagnosis was necrosis of seminoma, and culture of thene crotic tissuewas positivefor Clostridium. Thepre sent caseappe ars to bethefirst caseof a testicular tumor associated with acute scrotum due to tumor growth, necrosis and infection caused by gas-producing bacteria.
...
PMID:[Testicular tumor presenting as acute scrotum with infection caused by gas-producing bacteria]. 1994 95


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10