An international team of scientists has identified the neural mechanisms through which sound blunts pain in mice. The findings, which could inform development of safer methods to treat pain, were published in Science. The study was led by researchers at the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR); the University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei; and Anhui Medical University, Hefei, China. NIDCR is part of the National Institutes of Health.
“We need more effective methods of
managing acute and chronic pain, and that starts with gaining a better
understanding of the basic neural processes that regulate pain,” said NIDCR
Director Rena D’Souza, D.D.S., Ph.D. “By uncovering the circuitry that mediates
the pain-reducing effects of sound in mice, this study adds critical knowledge
that could ultimately inform new approaches for pain therapy.”
Dating back to 1960, studies in humans
have shown that music and other kinds of sound can help alleviate acute and
chronic pain, including pain from dental and medical surgery, labor and delivery,
and cancer. However, how the brain produces this pain reduction, or analgesia,
was less clear.
“Human brain imaging studies have
implicated certain areas of the brain in music-induced analgesia, but these are
only associations,” said co-senior author Yuanyuan (Kevin) Liu, Ph.D., a
Stadtman tenure-track investigator at NIDCR. “In animals, we can more fully
explore and manipulate the circuitry to identify the neural substrates
involved.”
The researchers first exposed mice with
inflamed paws to three types of sound: a pleasant piece of classical music, an
unpleasant rearrangement of the same piece, and white noise. Surprisingly, all
three types of sound, when played at a low intensity relative to background
noise (about the level of a whisper) reduced pain sensitivity in the mice.
Higher intensities of the same sounds had no effect on animals’ pain responses.
“We were really surprised that the
intensity of sound, and not the category or perceived pleasantness of sound
would matter,” Liu said.
To explore the brain circuitry
underlying this effect, the researchers used non-infectious viruses coupled
with fluorescent proteins to trace connections between brain regions. They
identified a route from the auditory cortex, which receives and processes
information about sound, to the thalamus, which acts as a relay station for
sensory signals, including pain, from the body. In freely moving mice,
low-intensity white noise reduced the activity of neurons at the receiving end
of the pathway in the thalamus.
In the absence of sound, suppressing the
pathway with light- and small molecule-based techniques mimicked the
pain-blunting effects of low-intensity noise, while turning on the pathway
restored animals’ sensitivity to pain.
Liu said it is unclear if similar brain
processes are involved in humans, or whether other aspects of sound, such as
its perceived harmony or pleasantness, are important for human pain relief.
“We don’t know if human music means
anything to rodents, but it has many different meanings to humans—you have a
lot of emotional components,” he said.
The results could give scientists a starting point for studies to determine whether the animal findings apply to humans, and ultimately could inform development of safer alternatives to opioids for treating pain.
Source: https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/researchers-discover-how-sound-reduces-pain-mice
Journal article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abn4663
Source: Researchers
discover how sound reduces pain in mice – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
No comments:
Post a Comment