Cape Times

Study proves men and women experience pain differentl­y

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NEURONS in the spinal cord process pain signals differentl­y in women compared to men, suggests a study.

The finding, published in the journal BRAIN, could lead to better and more personalis­ed treatments for chronic pain, which are desperatel­y needed, especially in light of the opioid epidemic.

Women are disproport­ionately impacted by the burden of chronic pain.

They are more likely than men to report low back pain, neck pain, orofacial pain and neuropathi­c pain, and twice as many women report common migraines or headaches.

But to date, most research on pain was conducted on male rodents.

The new study led by researcher­s at The Ottawa Hospital in Canada, however, used female and male spinal cord tissue from both rats and humans (generously donated by deceased individual­s and their families).

By examining the spinal

cord tissue in the laboratory, the researcher­s were able to show that a neuronal growth factor called BDNF plays a major role in amplifying spinal cord pain signalling in male humans and male rats, but not in female humans or female rats.

When female rats had their ovaries removed, the difference disappeare­d, pointing to a hormonal connection.

“Developing new pain drugs requires a detailed understand­ing of how pain is processed at the biological level,” said Dr Annemarie Dedek, lead author of the study.

“This new discovery lays the foundation for the developmen­t of new treatments to help those suffering from chronic pain.”

This is the first time a sex-related difference in pain signalling has been identified in human spinal cord tissue.

Future studies are required to understand how this biological difference may contribute to difference­s in pain sensation between men and women, the researcher­s said. |

 ?? ?? WOMEN are disproport­ionately impacted by the burden of chronic pain. | PEXELS
WOMEN are disproport­ionately impacted by the burden of chronic pain. | PEXELS

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