The Independent & The Independent on Sunday
20 January 2008
Drug derived from chillis is hailed as a breakthrough in pain relief
A substance found in chilli peppers has been used to create a
painkiller which prevents suffering without the usual side-effects of
conventional anaesthetics, such as unconsciousness and paralysis. The
new drug can be targeted against only those nerves involved in sending
pain signals to the brain, making pain relief far more effective and
safer than existing anaesthetics, researchers believe.
They also think the new analgesic could benefit people suffering from
so-called pathological pain – long-term discomfort which is not caused
by any obvious injury – as well as chronic itching which can seriously
affect quality of life.A painkiller that blocks only pain neurons the nerve cells leading to
the central nervous system could allow women to give birth painlessly
using an epidural which does not paralyse the lower body, or allow a
patient to have open-heart surgery while remaining conscious.
“Current nerve-blocks cause paralysis and total numbness. We’re
offering a targeted approach to pain management that avoids these
problems. This new strategy could profoundly change pain treatment,”
said Clifford Woolf, of the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston,
who led the study with Bruce Bean, of Harvard Medical School.
“Eventually, this method could completely transform surgical and
post-surgical analgesia, allowing patients to remain fully alert
without experiencing pain or paralysis. In fact, the possibilities seem
endless,” Dr Woolf added.
“I could even imagine using this method to treat itch, as
itch-sensitive neurons fall into the same group as pain-sensing ones.”
The new painkiller is based on combining two molecules. One is normally
an inactive ingredient of the local anaesthetic lidocaine, called
QX-314, and the other is capsaicin, the chemical in chilli peppers that
makes them taste spicy or feel hot when rubbed on the skin. When combined, the two molecules create an analgesic that works only on
pain-sensitive nerves and leaves other types of nerves unaffected, the
scientists found. Their study, published in the journal Nature, found
it to be effective in laboratory tests on rats. When injected into the
animals’ paws, the drug anaesthetised the rodents against heat and pain
but their movements and other normal bodily functions were unaffected.
The effects lasted for up to two hours.
Further work is needed before tests can begin on humans but Dr Woolf
believes the drug will work. He said: “We are optimistic that this
method will eventually be applied to humans and change our experience
during procedures ranging from knee surgery to tooth extractions.”
The secret of how the two molecules combine to kill pain lies in how
they target a molecule “pore” which exists only in the membrane of
nerve cells involved in pain detection. By blocking the opening of the
pore, the scientists, in effect, disconnected pain-sensitive nerve
cells.
“We introduced a local anaesthetic selectively into specific
populations of neurons,” said Professor Bean. “Now we can block the
activity of pain-sensing neurons without disrupting other kinds of
neurons that control movements or non-painful sensations.”
Story Landis, of the US National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke, which funded the research, said it could be a landmark in
the development of new painkillers.
“The holy grail in pain science is to eliminate pathologic pain without
impairing thinking, alertness, co-ordination, or other vital functions
of the nervous system,” Dr Landis said.
“This finding holds the promise of major future breakthroughs for
millions of people who suffer with disabling pain.”
How it works
Conventional painkillers work by blocking the tiny channels in nerve
cell membranes, which are essential for a cell to function properly.
However, as well as blocking pain, anaesthetics also block anything to
do with movement or non-pain sensations, causing paralysis, numbness or
unconsciousness. The new drug works specifically against a type of
channel called TRPV1, which exists only in the membrane of pain cells.
The drug has two active ingredients which work together in unison. The
capsaicin molecule from chilli peppers opens the TRPV1 channel and
allows it to act as a gate through which the second molecule, derived
from the anaesthetic lidocaine, enters pain-sensitive cells.
By Steve Connor, Science Editor
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