Treatment for neuropathic pain on the horizon?
This link at Drudge caught my eye: “Scientists discover ‘off-switch’ for pain.”
That would certainly be something to be thankful for.
But then I thought, “Well, I bet it doesn’t apply to neuropathic pain.” I have a special interest in neuropathic pain, because I suffered from it for many years:
We all know what pain from an injury feels like. But if you’re fortunate, you don’t know””and will never have to learn from personal experience””what neuropathic pain is like.
Nerves ordinarily conduct pain impulses when tissues are damaged, but that sort of pain corresponds to the degree of injury and is time-limited. Once healing occurs, the pain (or almost all of it) goes away. Neuropathic pain is different; it arises from injury to the nerves themselves. They become disordered in a host of ways, and the quality of the pain impulses is quite different from that of the more familiar types of pain, and has a marked tendency to become chronic…
Not that much is known about nerve pain today, and it remains exceedingly difficult to treat. But about twenty years ago, when I began to deal with it myself, it was the relative Dark Ages of pain control.
When I hurt my arms it was terrifying; the pain felt like nothing I’d ever had before, and it was with me 24/7. The best I can do to describe it is to say that among its many horrific qualities was the feeling of having sustained a severe sunburn on the entire surface of both arms. But with a real sunburn, there are salves and ointments to apply, you know why you’re hurting, and you know that in a few days the pain will go away.
This pain was different. It waxed and waned in odd and erratic fashion, although it tended to be at its worst at night, which made sleep nearly impossible and the nights a long drawn-out torment. It wasn’t just the burning, either. There was also tingling and stabbing pain and severe achiness and exquisite sensitivity and weakness and pressure and all sorts of odd sensations that gave me the feeling that my body had become a sadistic trickster bent on driving me mad
What’s more, although most pain is a warning sign that something is being damaged (stove, hot, get away!), neuropathic pain appears to have no reasonable purpose at all. No tissue is being harmed, and yet the pain goes on and on and on. You can see why a successful treatment for neuropathic pain would be a boon to humankind.
And so, when I went to the article linked by Drudge, I was elated to see this:
In research published in the medical journal Brain, Saint Louis University researcher Daniela Salvemini, Ph.D. and colleagues within SLU, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other academic institutions have discovered a way to block a pain pathway in animal models of chronic neuropathic pain…
Now, that sounds great. Of course, there have been other promising agents that haven’t worked out. But anything that gives hope of an effective treatment for the scourge of neuropathic pain is good news indeed.
Neo have you tried alpha lipoic acid ? It is used on europe for diabetic neuropathy. My father in law used it at my
Suggestion after his own md gave him a shoulder shrug
When he said his feet kept him awake. He had a fairly good
Response, he also used Bvitamins, large doses & topical
Hydrocortisone oint. None of these measures needs a script
Alpha lipoicacid is sold at wamart
Excuse sp, workin off a smart phone that is not too
Smart
The way this post is worded it is hard to tell if Neo is still having trouble with neuropathic pain. Lets hope she is better now. I’m curious if Neo knows what triggered her pain in the first place and how it was eventually resolved or ameliorated?
I’m glad this topic came up.
molly nh; Illuminati:
I tried to convey the fact that it is not that bad now by writing “I suffered from it for many years” rather than “I have suffered from it for many years.” But I guess that didn’t quite get the message across.
The rest of the story is here.
I suffer from chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), which is incurable although some people go into remission. It affects 1.5 persons per 1 million. I linked to your story for my friends because you describe neuropathic pain so well. The smartest thing I ever did was make sure I had a pain management specialist as part of my medical team.
terogs:
Good luck to you.
When I first was injured and developed neuropathic pain, pain specialists were few and far between. I first encountered them about 5 years into my saga, and it was helpful. One has to be careful not to go to the kind who attribute everything to a bad attitude, though (there are such pain specialists).