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Why don't Painkillers Work on
Patients with Fibromyalgia?
November 05, 2007
People who have the common chronic pain condition
fibromyalgia often report that they don't respond to the types of medication
that relieve other people's pain. New research from the University of
Michigan Health System helps to explain why that might be: Patients with
fibromyalgia were found to have reduced binding ability of a type of
receptor in the brain that is the target of opioid painkiller drugs such as
morphine.
The study included positron emission tomography (PET) scans of the brains of
patients with fibromyalgia, and of an equal number of sex- and age-matched
people without the often-debilitating condition. Results showed that the
fibromyalgia patients had reduced mu-opioid receptor (MOR) availability
within regions of the brain that normally process and dampen pain signals -
specifically, the nucleus accumbens, the anterior cingulate and the amygdala.
"The reduced availability of the receptor was associated with greater pain
among people with fibromyalgia," says lead author Richard E. Harris, Ph.D.,
research investigator in the Division of Rheumatology at the U-M Medical
School's Department of Internal Medicine and a researcher at the U-M Chronic
Pain and Fatigue Research Center.
"These findings could explain why opioids are anecdotally thought to be
ineffective in people with fibromyalgia," he notes. The findings appear in
the Journal of Neuroscience. "The finding is significant because it has been
difficult to determine the causes of pain in patients with fibromyalgia, to
the point that acceptance of the condition by medical practitioners has been
slow."
Opioid pain killers work by binding to opioid receptors in the brain and
spinal cord. In addition to morphine, they include codeine, propoxyphene-containing
medications such as Darvocet, hydrocodone-containing medications such as
Vicodin, and oxycodone-containing medications such as Oxycontin.
The researchers theorize based on their findings that, with the lower
availability of the MORs in three regions of the brains of people with
fibromyalgia, such painkillers may not be able to bind as well to the
receptors as they can in the brains of people without the condition.
Put more simply: When the painkillers cannot bind to the receptors, they
cannot alleviate the patient's pain as effectively, Harris says. The reduced
availability of the receptors could result from a reduced number of opioid
receptors, enhanced release of endogenous opioids (opioids, such as
endorphins, that are produced naturally by the body), or both, Harris says.
The research team also found a possible link with depression. The PET scans
showed that the fibromyalgia patients with more depressive symptoms had
reductions of MOR binding potential in the amygdala, a region of the brain
thought to modulate mood and the emotional dimension of pain.
The study subjects were 17 women with fibromyalgia and 17 women without the
condition.
The senior author of the paper was Jon-Kar Zubieta, M.D., Ph.D., the Phil F.
Jenkins Research Professor of Depression in the U-M Department of Psychiatry
and a member of U-M's Molecular and Behavioural Neuroscience Institute,
Depression Center and Department of Radiology. Other authors were Daniel J.
Clauw, M.D.; David J. Scott, Ph.D.; Samuel A. McLean, M.D., MPH; and Richard
H. Gracely, Ph.D.
The research was supported by grants from the Department of the Army; the
National Center for Research Resources, a component of the National
Institutes of Health; and the NIH. Harris was supported by an NIH-National
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine Grant. McLean was
supported by an NIH grant.
(Source: Journal of Neuroscience 2007; 27(37): 10000-06. : Katie Vloet :
University of Michigan : November 2007)
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