Publications by authors named "Gretchen J Summer"

Severe burn induces severe pain. While chronic as well as acute pain syndromes are reported, the peripheral mechanisms of burn-induced chronic pain syndromes have not been studied. We tested the hypothesis that burn induces plastic changes in primary afferent nociceptors that predispose to chronic pain states.

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Thermal burns induce pain at the site of injury, mechanical hyperalgesia, associated with a complex time-dependent inflammatory response. To determine the contribution of inflammatory mediators to burn injury-induced mechanical hyperalgesia, we measured dynamic changes in the levels of three potent hyperalgesic cytokines, interleukin IL-1 beta, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha), in skin of the rat, following a partial-thickness burn injury. Only IL-6 demonstrated a sustained increase ipsilateral but not contralateral to the burn, correlating with the prolonged ipsilateral mechanical hyperalgesia.

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Unlabelled: The development of more effective methods of relieving pain associated with burn injury is a major unmet medical need. Not only is acute burn injury pain a source of immense suffering, but it has been linked to debilitating chronic pain and stress-related disorders. Although pain management guidelines and protocols have been developed and implemented, unrelieved moderate-to-severe pain continues to be reported after burn injury.

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Unlabelled: Although mechanical hyperalgesia associated with medical procedures is the major source of severe pain in burn-injured patients, little is known about its underlying mechanism. One reason for this has been the lack of a model for mechanical hyperalgesia at the site of injury. We have modified an established partial-thickness burn model in the rat to produce long-lasting primary mechanical hyperalgesia, which is present from the first measurement at 0.

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