Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (substance P)
21,176 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pain related to fibromyalgia may consist of a complex interaction of nociceptive, neuropathic, dysregulatory central nervous system and psychosomatic mechanisms. Nociceptor pain is based on the excitation of nervous sensors specialized to signal potentially harmful stimuli, i.e., the nociceptors. Metabolic deficiencies in muscle and neurogenic inflammation induced by the release of substance P and other neuropeptides from the peripheral nerve endings may result in chemical sensitization of nociceptors and an ensuing hyperalgesia particularly present in tender points. Neuropathic pain is due to pathological mechanisms within nerve cells and fibers in the peripheral and central nervous system. Pathophysiology may be related to compression (such as in the carpal tunnel syndrome or a vertebral disk herniation) or regeneration of nerves, resulting in ectopic impulse discharges and disturbances of axonal transport. The ensuing neuronal hyperexcitability and trophic changes induced by a disturbed axonal transport system may be major factors of pain in fibromyalgia. Dysregulatory pain denotes pain maintained by dysfunction of efferent control loops. Thus, if spinal motoneuron output results in excessive tension of postural muscle, nociceptors in muscles, tendons and joints might become more excited. Persistent abnormal spinal reflex transmission due to, e.g., peripheral trauma or inappropriate postural habits may result in a vicious circle between muscle hypertension and pain. Similarly, a defective sympathetic control may result in disturbed microcirculation and nociceptor excitation (e.g., in sympathetic algodystrophy). Many symptoms of pain in fibromyalgia (trigger points, pain referral, pain associated with muscle spasm or neurogenic joint immobilization) can be attributed to abnormal control mechanisms in a complex cybernetic system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pathophysiological mechanisms of fibromyalgia. 181 May 27

Physical trauma is generally accepted as a possible factor in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. In the last ten years, there have been a few rare case reports of physical trauma precipitating psoriasic arthritis. We observed two such cases following an occupational accident discovered one and a half year and two and a half year after onset of the first clinical manifestations. In the first case, a 43-year-old man had a fracture of the right calcaneus in March 1991. He was treated with nailing and also required emergency surgery of the posterior tibial artery. The tibiotarsal joint was normal radiologically. Pain persisted after treatment and in 1993 he presented with psoriasis of the scalp and several other localizations together with Hallopeau's acrodermatitis continua of the ankle, pathognomonic for psoriasic arthritis. Salazosufapyridin was given. The second case was a 50-year-old man who had major pain in both wrists immediately after falling on the palm of his hands in 1992. Bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome developed which did not respond well to surgery. In 1993, he developed inflammatory synovitis and also had psoriasis mainly located at the elbows. Immunological tests were negative. Cortisone and salazosulfapyridin were not particularly effective and the patient later developed arthritis of the hip and ankle joints. Physicians should be aware of physical trauma as a causative factor in psoriasic arthritis due to the potential legal implications. Criteria for imputability are: single major physical trauma, absence of clinical signs prior to the trauma, continuous clinical course, first signs occurring then predominating at the joint exposed to trauma. The pathophysiology of this type of arthritis is not well understood. Deep Koebner's phenomena could be involved. Activation of substance P has also been hypothesized.
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PMID:[Post-traumatic psoriatic arthritis. 2 cases]. 872 87

We investigated the response of chronic neck and shoulder pain to decompression of the carpal tunnel in 38 patients with whiplash injury. We also determined the plasma levels of substance P (SP) and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), which are inflammatory peptides that sensitise nociceptors. Compared with normal control subjects, the mean concentrations of SP (220 v 28 ng/l; p < 0.0001) and CGRP (400 v 85 ng/l; p < 0.0005) were high in patients with chronic shoulder and neck pain before surgery. After operation their levels fell to normal. There was resolution of neurological symptoms with improvement of pain in 90% of patients. Only two of the 30 with chronic neck and shoulder pain who had been treated conservatively showed improvement when followed up at two years. In spite of having neuropathic pain arising from the median nerve, all these patients had normal electromyographic and nerve-conduction studies. Chronic pain in whiplash injury may be caused by 'atypical' carpal tunnel syndrome and responds favourably to surgery which is indicated in patients with neck, shoulder and arm pain but not in those with mild symptoms in the hand. Previously, the presence of persistent neurological symptoms has been accepted as a sign of a poor outcome after a whiplash injury, but our study suggests that it may be possible to treat chronic pain by carpal tunnel decompression.
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PMID:Management of chronic pain in whiplash injury. 1293 21