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Could This Be The Future Of Chronic Pain Relief?

Chronic Pain Memory Wipe

  Posted: 02/17/2012 3:53 pm

By Gary Stix
(Click here for the original article)

One of brain researchers’ closest brushes with science fiction in the last 10 years came with the discovery of a chemical that could completely wipe out memory, a molecule that evoked a real-life version of the scenario depicted in the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, in which a couple undertakes a procedure to erase their memory of each other when the relationship falls apart.

Fortunately, the artificial amnesia occurred only in laboratory rats. But the experiment raised an obvious question: What would anyone do with a drug that essentially reformats your mental hard drive?

Who would be interested besides a neurotic Woody Allen trying to reboot his life, or a sadistic Josef Mengele type attempting to conduct the kind of scientific experiment that would be judged a war crime at The Hague?

A group of researchers have now come up with a more pragmatic answer to this question than incorporating the memory-erasing agent as a plot device in a cyberpunk novel

Neuroscientists at McGill University and collaborators have just reported in Molecular Pain that the chemical with the evocative acronym ZIP can selectively wipe out the nervous system’s “memory” of the chronic aches and pains that plague about one in four North Americans, apparently leaving other memories intact.

Pain that persists more than a few minutes leaves a memory trace—that’s why just a light touch is sometimes enough to produce a yelp of agony months after an injury. The archetypal example is the soldier with an amputated leg whose phantom limb still aches years after being severed.

In the experiment at McGill, ZIP administered to the spinal area of rats wiped out pain memories in hind paws that had become tender and hyper-sensitized from the application of capsacin, the compound that produces the burn of chili peppers.

ZIP is the Eternal Sunshine chemical that was spritzed into the memory-forming locus of rat brains to make the animals forget their past. One of the McGill co-authors, Todd C. Sacktor of SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, led the original research that discovered ZIP (zeta inhibitory peptide) along with the memory-preserving enzyme PKM-zeta, which it inhibits.

Years of experimentation and testing would be required to determine exactly where it should be administered to selectively wipe out pain memories without obliterating a lifetime of family recollections. And even then, ZIP will never be an over the counter drug. To be used in medicine, it would need to be injected into the spinal cord to reach the neurons involved with storing the pain memory.

Still, the experiment will leave neuroscientists with a better understanding of the molecular players involved in establishing pain memory. “It gives a clue as to a potential target for influencing persistent and chronic pain,” says Terence J. Coderre, a professor of anesthesiology and neuroscience at McGill who headed the research team.

Even if ZIP never makes its way down the lengthy drug development pipeline, it lays the groundwork for other chemicals that could permanently annul the pain memory that results in the persistent discomfort that turns walking, sitting or even lying down into a daily ordeal for so many.

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08:57 PM on 02/21/2012
The most effective therapy for pain I have found is acupuncture. In order for it to work however the body must be intact. Acupuncture works through neural and other meridian pathways. If they are blocked, damaged or missing, the acupuncture has a tough time stimulating the brain and other areas necessary for it to work.
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frank day
Republican = FAIL
10:04 PM on 02/20/2012
Very interesting article.

I suffer from chronic pain following stroke. Resetting the nervous system makes intuitive

sense.
06:38 PM on 02/19/2012
Here is "The Situation".
This is mad doctor stuff folks.
If this story made it to the papers, they already tried it on humans.
Don't kid yourself.
We are just ginny pigs to every doctor.
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froidytoidy
Underwhelmed Independent
01:13 PM on 02/19/2012
Maybe this could wipe out the memory of pain, but it won't wipe out an addict's craving for pain meds.
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frank day
Republican = FAIL
10:05 PM on 02/20/2012
Huh?

Do you think every pain patient is an addict?
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froidytoidy
Underwhelmed Independent
11:09 AM on 02/21/2012
frank day: Not at all, that's why I used the word 'addict' and not patient. Addicts are in a category by themselves. Patients in pain may become dependent on a medication, but they are not controlled by it as addicts are.
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rickysmith250
06:58 PM on 02/18/2012
i would hate to be there Ginny pig. i just deal with any pain that comes along.... i dont believe in chronic pain... its all in the head....
07:50 PM on 02/18/2012
Obviously, you've never experienced herniated discs, pinched nerves, arthritis in your spine (bone spurs) or degenerative disc disease. If so, you would be eating your words and writhing in PAIN! Don't talk about something you don't know about. I have all of these, and BELIEVE me, it is way past the simple "pain" definition.
08:03 PM on 02/18/2012
I have several of the same things you have, and I agree with you. Yes, it's all in the head, but the head is the origin of the nerves that are reporting the pain back to the brain. The brain receives and interprets the nerve signals and relays them to our conscious awareness. So you are 100% correct. "rickysmith250" has posted something he knows nothing about. By saying "I just deal with any pain that comes along", he is overtly acknowledging that the pain his brain is telling him about is REAL. He may simply have a high tolerance for pain.
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rickysmith250
09:54 PM on 02/18/2012
"wrong" ive had 3 disc fusions broken hip. so i know how it feels. i was not saying "pain pills are not good cause ive used them on each case.... im talking about these addicts that dr.shop around saying im in pain i need drugs..... i do understand some of us that are in constant pain need these things cause i still feel it and have to use pain meds when it gets bad.... and will probably will for the rest of my life.. but there are way to many dr's pushing this meds to people that dnt need, and that is what i meant. sorry if you took the wrong way!!!!
10:37 PM on 02/18/2012
That's really unfair, rickysmith250. I am a cancer survivor, and I have a hole in my jaw where my jawbone (and the tumor) used to live. That hole hurts daily, and as a result, I lost weight because I simply couldn't eat, it was so painful. I'm in treatment for the pain, and since beginning said treatment I have gained 20 pounds and am able to enjoy a full range of foods that I couldn't before. When you say it's all in our heads, you insult our intelligence and knowledge of our own bodies. That's a shame.
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rickysmith250
12:03 AM on 02/19/2012
I'm happy to see you beat this cancer,, but i was talking about pill abusers that enjoy the high... not someone in your situation.... look i do understand cause not only ive had the surgeries stated before,i'm terminally ill and wont be alive in another year ive learned to accept it. but when your in so much pain you need the meds and its ok for me or yourself, but a lot of dr's give it to anyone that says im in chronic pain..... its not right.. maybe i didnt say this the way i should of before... i didnt mean harm towards you or someone that is in real pain.... and im happy that you are doing better.. stay strong..
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WaveRhydr
DIEBOLD-WE VOTE SO YOU DONT HAVE TO
04:19 PM on 02/18/2012
There is no question that there are lots of folks who like getting high from pain killers... but most of them are not the people who are actually in pain.

Something that would still allow you to function, ie drive a car, go to work, etc, and stop the pain would be fantastic.
04:00 PM on 02/18/2012
Keep it and give me a fat script for Norco!!
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Morgan378
03:51 PM on 02/18/2012
So the memory of my chronic pain from yesterday will be gone. What about the pain I'm going to feel tomorrow? See, that's the thing. It's nice to forget about what's already happened - but it's FUTURE pain I'm concerned with. How many times does one need get this injected in their spine? Even daily - I don't see the help it's going to give me in an hour with CHRONIC pain. I'd prefer not feeling it in the first place.

Call me again later when those poor rats aren't being tortured for no damn good reason.
12:38 PM on 02/18/2012
Has Electric Shock Therapy been tried for pain?
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01:31 PM on 02/18/2012
yes, ECT has been tried for just about everything. i don't think a large clinical trial's been done though. but look here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16495009
11:50 AM on 02/18/2012
Most of you leaving comments have no clue what it being discussed in the article. I had an injury to my should area from my neck to scapula and the rotary cuff. The pain is ever constant, though it is merely pain memory, as the injury is long since healed. If you could wipe out the pain memory then you would alleviate daily pain experienced by millions of people. Like they said, it is pain you feed even if the limb is not present anymore. The pain stored in the neurons lasts forever in many cases.
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01:33 PM on 02/18/2012
thanks for sharing. i also have chronic pain issues that i've only recently made progress overcoming.

you say the injury is long-healed; does that mean you have full function?
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Morgan378
03:56 PM on 02/18/2012
It's actually the headline that's the problem. HP is notorious for them being non-sequiter to most who actually have "chronic daily pain" - not chronic daily phantom pains, etc. If it was worded differently I wouldn't have bothered at all.

Oh, and I "have a clue" thank you very much.
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C Karen Stopford
10:59 AM on 02/18/2012
Yup, just like a drone strike "selectively" wipes out terrorists. Not buying it.
10:15 AM on 02/18/2012
As an alternative or until this technology is perfected, there's this new thing out -- it's a five thousand year old pain remedy called "MMJ".
05:05 PM on 02/18/2012
Works great. " MMJ".
06:40 PM on 02/19/2012
Can you spell that?
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Sharon Hanson
Skeptical of the *pseudo-skeptics*
09:33 AM on 02/18/2012
Medicine gives us pain, at least in my case and now they want to experiment some more. Neuroscientists my foot, they are dangerous and so are psychiatrists. My neurologist wanted to inject me with Botox. That was the fad a few years ago. I wanted no part of it and then when I found out the reason for my pain, well I'm glad I didn't. Unbelievable and very concerning.
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bikerdude
On the left side of progressive
09:23 AM on 02/18/2012
This is awful misleading. We can't remember pain. We can remember how we reacted or what happened when we had it, but we can't remember it...
09:47 AM on 02/18/2012
I don't think you understand what is being said in the article. The compound being discussed is not directed towards conscious memory of pain, but rather the neurological reaction, transformation, and hypersensitization after a very painful stimulus. They were referring to that phenomena as a neurological "memory" - that can evidently be erased. A good example, which was stated, was phantom limb syndrome.
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spkninglsh
'Poor' Fridge Owner
11:15 AM on 02/18/2012
Here's more on pain and memory:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/02/120213154141.htm
06:41 PM on 02/19/2012
Thats not what they said.
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
08:26 AM on 02/18/2012
all i want is some raw cannabis juice. but apparently that's illegal.