Abstract

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating mental health disorder that occurs after exposure to a traumatic event. Patients with comorbid chronic pain experience affective distress, worse quality of life, and poorer responses to treatments for pain or PTSD than those with either condition alone. FDA-approved PTSD treatments are often ineffective analgesics, requiring additional drugs to treat co-morbid symptoms. Therefore, development of new treatment strategies necessitate a better understanding of the pathophysiology of PTSD and comorbid pain. The single prolonged stress (SPS) model of PTSD induces the development of persistent mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia. Increased Nociceptin/Orphanin FQ (N/OFQ) levels in serum and CSF accompany these exaggerated nociceptive responses, as well as increased serum levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α). Therefore, the primary goal was to determine the role of TNF-α in the development of SPS-induced allodynia/hyperalgesia and elevated serum and CNS N/OFQ using two approaches: TNF-α synthesis inhibition, and blockade with anti-TNF-α antibody that acts primarily in the periphery. Administration of TNF-α synthesis blocker, thalidomide (THL), immediately after SPS prevented increased TNF-α and development of allodynia and hyperalgesia. The THL effect lasted at least 21 days, well after thalidomide treatment ended (day 5). THL also prevented SPS-induced increases in serum N/OFQ and reversed regional N/OFQ mRNA expression changes in the CNS. Serum TNF-α increases detected at 4 and 24 h post SPS were not accompanied by blood brain barrier disruption. A single injection of anti-TNF-α antibody to male and female rats during the SPS procedure prevented the development of allodynia, hyperalgesia, and elevated serum N/OFQ, and reduced SPS-induced anxiety-like behaviors in males. Anti-TNFα treatment also blocked development of SPS-induced allodynia in females, and blocked increased hypothalamic N/OFQ in males and females. This suggests that a peripheral TNF-α surge is necessary for the initiation of allodynia associated with SPS, as well as the altered central and peripheral N/OFQ that maintains nociceptive sensitivity. Therefore, early alleviation of TNF-α provides new therapeutic options for investigation as future PTSD and co-morbid pain treatments.

Highlights

  • Chronic or persistent pain is one of the most commonly co-occurring physical problems for patients with PTSD, and an even higher incidence of this comorbidity was observed in the veteran population [1]

  • Thalidomide (THL) blocks synthesis and release of TNFα in the brain and periphery, so male rats subjected to single prolonged stress (SPS) and their controls were treated with vehicle or an FDA-approved small molecule blood-brain barrier permeable tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) synthesis inhibitor [36]

  • This paper demonstrates, for the first time, the time course of circulating TNF-α following trauma in a preclinical model of PTSD (SPS)

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic or persistent pain is one of the most commonly co-occurring physical problems for patients with PTSD, and an even higher incidence of this comorbidity was observed in the veteran population [1] Further complicating this comorbidity are findings that patients with chronic pain and PTSD experience more intense pain and affective distress, higher levels of life interference, and greater disability than patients with either condition alone [2,3,4]. The trigger for development of PTSD and co-morbid pain symptoms is unknown, but findings by us and others using the single prolonged stress (SPS) model of PTSD suggest that tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) initiates the development of pain and anxiety-like behaviors. Because N/OFQ can bi-functionally modulate pain sensitivity, it is important to understand how N/OFQ is modulated under conditions that increase pain sensitivity and allodynia

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