AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with diabetic polyneuropathy and pain often experience a loss of sensory function, raising questions about how pain is generated despite reduced nerve input.
  • A study involving 93 patients found that those with painful diabetic neuropathy had impaired spinal reflex responses, which suggests a mechanism called spinal disinhibition may be involved in their pain sensations.
  • The research linked greater spinal disinhibition to increased sensitivity to mechanical pain and heightened burning sensations, indicating a unique pain profile that combines loss and gain of sensory function.

Article Abstract

The dominant sensory phenotype in patients with diabetic polyneuropathy and neuropathic pain is a loss of function. This raises questions as to which mechanisms underlie pain generation in the face of potentially reduced afferent input. One potential mechanism is spinal disinhibition, whereby a loss of spinal inhibition leads to increased ascending nociceptive drive due to amplification of, or a failure to suppress, incoming signals from the periphery. We aimed to explore whether a putative biomarker of spinal disinhibition, impaired rate-dependent depression of the Hoffmann reflex, is associated with a mechanistically appropriate and distinct pain phenotype in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy. In this cross-sectional study, 93 patients with diabetic neuropathy underwent testing of Hoffmann reflex rate-dependent depression and detailed clinical and sensory phenotyping, including quantitative sensory testing. Compared to neuropathic patients without pain, patients with painful diabetic neuropathy had impaired Hoffmann reflex rate-dependent depression at 1, 2 and 3 Hz ( ≤ 0.001). Patients with painful diabetic neuropathy exhibited an overall loss of function profile on quantitative sensory testing. However, within the painful diabetic neuropathy group, cluster analysis showed evidence of greater spinal disinhibition associated with greater mechanical pain sensitivity, relative heat hyperalgesia and higher ratings of spontaneous burning pain. These findings support spinal disinhibition as an important centrally mediated pain amplification mechanism in painful diabetic neuropathy. Furthermore, our analysis indicates an association between spinal disinhibition and a distinct phenotype, arguably akin to hyperpathia, with combined loss and relative gain of function leading to increasing nociceptive drive.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10016414PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcad051DOI Listing

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