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Sci. Signal., 17 January 2012 EDITORS' CHOICE
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Pain Long-Lasting Pain KillerPeter R. Stern Science, AAAS, Cambridge CB2 1LQ, UK Opioids are among the most widely used and extensively studied drugs in the world. A continuous application of relatively low opioid doses is thought to be necessary to maintain synaptic depression in pain pathways. Drdla-Schutting et al. found that a single opioid application could produce lasting reversal of synaptic long-term potentiation in pain pathways. Chronic pain is often associated with synaptic potentiation in nociceptive pathways. A brief, high-dose application of opioids depotentiated long-term potentiation in spinal pain pathways. The same dose also reversed hyperalgesia in behaving animals. Thus, opioids not only attenuate pain but may also eradicate a significant cause for chronic pain. R. Drdla-Schutting, J. Benrath, G. Wunderbaldinger, J. Sandkühler, Erasure of a spinal memory trace of pain by a brief, high-dose opioid administration. Science 335, 235–238 (2012). [Abstract] [Full Text]
Citation: P. R. Stern, Long-Lasting Pain Killer. Sci. Signal. 5, ec19 (2012). The editors suggest the following Related Resources on Science sites:In Science Signaling
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Science Signaling. ISSN 1937-9145 (online), 1945-0877 (print). Pre-2008: Science's STKE. ISSN 1525-8882