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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Physiologically, itch and pain are transmitted in separate specific peripheral C-units and central afferent pathways. Some neuropathic pain patients with intact but sensitized (irritable) primary C-nociceptors have spontaneous pain, heat hyperalgesia, static and dynamic mechanical hyperalgesia. The question was whether cutaneous histamine application induces pain in these patients. For comparison histamine was applied into normal skin experimentally sensitized by capsaicin. Histamine application in the capsaicin-induced primary or secondary hyperalgesic skin did not change the intensity and quality of capsaicin pain. Itch was profoundly inhibited. Conversely, histamine application in neuropathic skin induced severe increase in spontaneous burning pain but no itch. In neuropathies irritable nociceptors may express histamine receptors or induce central sensitization to histaminergic stimuli so that itch converts into pain.
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PMID:Histamine-induced itch converts into pain in neuropathic hyperalgesia. 1173 94

The pain of migraine is often throbbing suggesting an important role for the cranial blood vessels and their innervation by the trigeminal nerve. It is proposed that clinically effective anti-migraine compounds, such as 5-HT(1B/1D) agonists, have actions that include inhibiting calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) release from trigeminal nerves. Human studies suggest that histamine can induce migraine possibly by activating nitric oxide (NO) synthase to promote endogenous NO production. The present studies investigated the effect of histamine and its antagonists on the cranial blood vessels using intravital microscopy to assess directly the diameter of dural arteries in sodium pentobarbitone anaesthetised rats. Electrical stimulation of a closed cranial window produces, by local depolarisation of nerves, dural vessel dilation that is monitored continuously on-line using video-microscopy and a video dimension analyser. Histamine infusion caused immediate and reproducible dilation of meningeal blood vessels (103.5+/-6%; n=40) that could be blocked by H(1)- (mepyramine) and H(2) (famotidine)-receptor antagonists (P<0.05), as well as a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor (N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methylester; P<0.05). Neurogenic dural vasodilation was not inhibited by H(2)-receptor antagonists, but was significantly inhibited by a H(1)-receptor antagonist at the high dose of 10 mg/kg. The present studies demonstrate that histamine is likely to activate NO synthase to promote NO production. There is also evidence that H(1)-receptors may be present on trigeminal neurones as the H(1)-receptor antagonist inhibited neurogenic vasodilation, albeit at a large dose.
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PMID:The role of histamine in dural vessel dilation. 1242 51

In origin, itch can be cutaneous ("pruritoceptive", e.g. dermatitis), neuropathic (e.g. multiple sclerosis), neurogenic (e.g. cholestasis), mixed (e.g. uraemia) or psychogenic. Although itch of cutaneous origin shares a common neural pathway with pain, the afferent C-fibres subserving this type of itch are a functionally distinct subset: they respond to histamine, acetylcholine and other pruritogens, but are insensitive to mechanical stimuli. Histamine is the main mediator for itch in insect bite reactions and in most forms of urticaria, and in these circumstances the itch responds well to H(1)-antihistamines. However, in most dermatoses and in systemic disease, low-sedative H(1)-antihistamines are ineffective. Opioid antagonists relieve itch caused by spinal opioids, cholestasis and, possibly, uraemia. Ondansetron relieves itch caused by spinal opioids (but not cholestasis and uraemia). Other drug treatments for itch include rifampicin, colestyramine and 17-alpha alkyl androgens (cholestasis), thalidomide (uraemia), cimetidine and corticosteroids (Hodgkin's lymphoma), paroxetine (paraneoplastic itch), aspirin and paroxetine (polycythaemia vera) and indometacin (some HIV+ patients). If the remedies specified fail, paroxetine and mirtazapine should be considered. Ultraviolet B therapy, particularly narrow-band UVB, may be superior to drug treatment for itch in uraemia.
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PMID:Itch: scratching more than the surface. 1265 79

Vasoneuroactive substances were applied through intradermal microdialysis membranes and characterized as itch- or pain-inducing in psychophysical experiments. Histamine always provoked itching and rarely pain, capsaicin always pain but never itching. Prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) led preferentially to moderate itching. Serotonin, acetylcholine, and bradykinin induced pain more often than itching. Subsequently the same substances were used in microneurography experiments to characterize the sensitivity profile of human cutaneous C-nociceptors. The responses of 89 mechanoresponsive (CMH, polymodal nociceptors), 52 mechanoinsensitive, histamine-negative (CMi(His-)), and 24 mechanoinsensitive, histamine-positive (CMi(His+)) units were compared. CMi(His+) units were most responsive to histamine and to PGE(2) and less to serotonin, ACh, bradykinin, and capsaicin. CMH units (polymodal nociceptors) and CMi(His-) units showed significantly weaker responses to histamine, PGE(2), and acetylcholine. Capsaicin and bradykinin responses were not significantly different in the two classes of mechano-insensitive units. We conclude that CMi(His+) units are "selective," but not "specific" for pruritogenic substances and that the pruritic potency of a mediator increases with its ability to activate CMi(His+) units but decreases with activation of CMH and CMi(His-) units.
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PMID:Chemical response pattern of different classes of C-nociceptors to pruritogens and algogens. 1261 75

1. The present study was designed to investigate the role of brain histamine in modulating pain transmission in mice. 2. In conscious mice implanted with an intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) cannula, the effects of i.v.c. injections of normal saline (control) and low and high doses histamine (2 and 40 microg/mouse, respectively) were investigated on the duration of paw licking and biting induced by subcutaneous (s.c.) injection of formalin (20 microL; 5%) into the plantar surface of the left hindpaw. 3. To clarify the involvement of histidine in the pain response, the effects of intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections of low and high doses of histidine (50 and 1000 mg/kg, respectively) alone or before i.c.v. injection of histamine were also examined. 4. Intraplantar injection of formalin induced a biphasic pain response (first phase: 0-5 min after injection; second phase: 20-40 min after injection). 5. Histamine (2 microg/mouse, i.c.v.) had no effect on the first phase of the pain response, but suppressed the second phase. The higher dose of histamine (40 microg/mouse, i.c.v.) suppressed both phases of the pain response. 6. Histidine, at 50 mg/kg, i.p., had no effect on the pain response, but the higher dose (1000 mg/kg, i.p.) suppressed the both phases of the pain response. 7. Pretreatment with the low dose of histidine (50 mg/kg, i.p.) prior to administration of 2 microg/mouse, i.c.v., histamine did not change the antinociception induced by low-dose histamine. However, pretreatment with the high dose of histidine (1000 mg/kg, i.p.) prior to 2 microg/mouse, i.c.v., histamine produced antinociception that resembled that seen following administration of the high dose of either histidine or histamine. Pretreatment with the low dose of histidine (50 mg/kg, i.p.) prior to administration of 40 microg/mouse, i.c.v., histamine has no effect on the pain response following high-dose histamine. Pretreatment with 1000 mg/kg, i.p., histidine prior to administration of 40 microg/mouse, i.c.v., histamine strongly suppressed both phases of the formalin-induced pain response, particularly the second phase. 8. The results of the present study indicate that: (i) activation of brain histamine produces antinociception in the mouse formalin test; (ii) peripheral loading with a high dose of histidine (1000 mg/kg, i.p.) alone exerts the same effect as that seen following 40 microg/mouse, i.c.v., histamine; and (iii) pretreatment with a high dose of histidine potentiates central histamine-induced antinociception.
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PMID:Central effect of histamine and peripheral effect of histidine on the formalin-induced pain response in mice. 1529 44

Histamine H 3 receptors have been suggested to inhibit the activity of a variety of central and peripheral neurons. Recent studies revealed that activation of spinal histamine H 3 receptors attenuates tail pinch, but not tail flick, nociception. To determine whether H 3 receptor-mediated antinociception is truly modality-specific, the effects of the selective H 3 agonist immepip were evaluated on nociceptive responses in rats induced by a range of thermal and mechanical intensities applied to the hind paw and the tail. In addition, the modulation of chemical nociceptive (ie, formalin) responses by immepip was evaluated. Immepip (5 to 30 mg/kg, subcutaneous) attenuated responses to low-intensity mechanical pinch, but not to high-intensity mechanical pressure applied to either the hind paw or the tail. The same doses of immepip had no effect on thermal nociceptive responses, regardless of the stimulus intensity. These results suggest that immepip-induced antinociception is modality- and intensity-specific. It is likely that immepip inhibits low-intensity mechanical nociception by activation of H 3 receptors located on the spinal terminals of Adelta and possibly C high-threshold mechanoreceptors. In addition, immepip (5 mg/kg, subcutaneous) significantly attenuated formalin-induced flinching, but not formalin-induced licking, during both phase 1 and phase 2, suggesting that H 3 agonists might be effective in treating some forms of clinically relevant pain. Certain classes of pain-transmitting fibers possess histamine H 3 receptors, but the localization and functional significance of these inhibitory receptors was not known. The present study shows that drugs that stimulate H 3 receptors can reduce behavioral responses produced by some, but not all, painful stimuli. Thus, H 3 agonists could be a new type of therapy for certain kinds of pain disorders.
J Pain 2005 Mar
PMID:Inhibition of chemical and low-intensity mechanical nociception by activation of histamine H3 receptors. 1577 13

Orexins are neuropeptides that are mostly expressed in the posterior and lateral hypothalamus, and related to the central control of appetite, arousal, and antinociception. Orexin neurons projected to the tuberomammillary nucleus and orexins may release histamine from the histamine neurons in this nucleus. Histamine is known to cause hypernociception. The roles of histamine H1 and H2 receptors in the orexin A-induced antinociception, however, have not been clarified yet. Here we studied the effects of histamine H1 and H2 receptors on orexin A-produced antinociception using histamine receptor knockout mice in four assays of nociception; the hot-plate, the tail-flick, the tail-pressure and the capsaicin tests. Furthermore we studied effects of histamine H1 and H2 receptor antagonists on orexin A-produced antinociception in C57BL/6 mice. The antinociceptive effects of i.c.v. orexin A were greater in histamine H1 receptor or H2 receptor knockout mice than in the wild-type mice in all four assays of pain. Furthermore, treatment of C57BL/6 mice with a combination of i.c.v. orexin A and d-chlorpheniramine (a histamine H1 receptor antagonist) or cimetidine (a histamine H2 receptor antagonist) showed a greater antinociception than i.c.v. orexin A alone in all four assays. These findings suggest the possibility that orexin A may activate H1 and H2 receptors in the supraspinal levels through the release of histamine from neurons, which might attenuate the antinociceptive effects of orexin A. Thus, the blocking of the histamine H1 or H2 receptor may produce antinociception and enhance the orexin A-induced antinociception.
Pain 2005 Nov
PMID:Enhanced antinociception by intracerebroventricularly administered orexin A in histamine H1 or H2 receptor gene knockout mice. 1620 30

In contrast to early epidemiological evidence offering links between eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (EMS) and microimpurities of L-tryptophan-containing dietary supplements (LTCDS), this account shows why reliance on a finite impurity from one manufacturer is both unnecessary and insufficient to explain the etiology of EMS. Excessive histamine activity has induced blood eosinophilia and myalgia (Greek: mys, muscle + algos, pain). Termination of the multiple actions of histamine is dependent on particular amine oxidases and histamine-N-methyltransferase. Histamine metabolism is rapid when these degradative reactions are operative. The latent effects of incurred histamine can be potentiated and aggravating when these mechanisms are impaired. Overloads of tryptophan supplements cause - among other relevant side-effects - an increased formation of formate and indolyl metabolites, several of which inhibit the degradation of histamine. Moreover, (non-EMS) subjects with hypothalamic-pituitary- adrenal (HPA) axis dysregulation have also manifested greatly increased sensitivities to incurred tryptophan and histamine. A final common pathway for syndromes characterized by eosinophilia with myalgia is now evident.
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PMID:A heretofore undisclosed crux of eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome: compromised histamine degradation. 1630 17

Neurophysiologic studies indicate that pruritus is a distinct sensation with its own neuronal pathways in the peripheral and central nervous system which are different from that of pain. Pruritus is a very disturbing sensation and most common skin-related symptom. Histamine was long considered to be the only mediator of pruritus. However, it has become evident that - besides histamine - a variety of neuromediators such as neurotrophins and neuropeptides as well as their receptors play an important role in pruritus. Neuromediators are produced by mast cells, keratinocytes and eosinophil granulocytes which are in close contact to sensory nerves. The discovery of these neurophysiological interactions opens new and promising therapeutic options for the treatment of pruritus.
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PMID:[Neurophysiology of pruritus]. 1658 23

Histamine H3 receptors (H3Rs) are autoreceptors that negatively regulate the release of histamine and other neurotransmitters such as norepinephrine, dopamine, and acetylcholine in the central nervous system (CNS). Consistent with the wide-spread projection of histaminergic neurons from the lateral hypothalamus, H3Rs are widely distributed in the CNS and are believed to play a variety of physiological roles, including regulation of feeding, arousal, cognition, pain, and endocrine systems. To further understand the physiological roles of H3Rs in vivo, we produced H3R knockout (H3R-/-) mice and found that H3R-/- mice displayed hyperphagia and late-onset obesity associated with hyperinsulinemia and leptinemia, the fundamental marks of metabolic syndromes. A series of non-imidazole H3R antagonists/inverse agonists with improved selectivity and potency have been developed and were found to regulate feeding and body weight gain in laboratory animals. Taken together, these observations suggest that H3Rs are involved in the regulation of feeding behavior and body weight. Several H3R inverse agonists targeting cognitive disorders and dementia have entered clinical trials. These trials will give critical information about the physiological functions of H3Rs in humans.
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PMID:Recent advances in molecular pharmacology of the histamine systems: physiology and pharmacology of histamine H3 receptor: roles in feeding regulation and therapeutic potential for metabolic disorders. 1664 67


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