Warmte
als pijnstiller.*
Uit een Engels onderzoek blijkt dat warmte net zo goed werkt tegen pijn als een pijnstiller. Door speciale DNA technieken toe te passen kon men warmte- en pijn”sensoren” in de cellen meten. Door temperaturen van 40°C of meer , bijv. door een waterkruik te gebruiken, aan te wenden op het lichaam worden de warmtesensor in de cellen geactiveerd waardoor de pijnsensoren wel voor 1 uur geblokkeerd worden om pijn te melden.
Grandma
was right again, a hot water bottle helps ease the pain
Researchers
in Britain say that the old fashioned idea that heat relieves pain does have
some truth in it and hugging a hot-water bottle can have a similar effect to a
painkiller.
Scientists
at University College London (UCL) have found by using DNA technology to monitor
heat and pain receptors within cells, that temperatures over 40C (104F) switch
on internal heat receptors which block the effect of chemical messengers that
cause the body to detect pain.
Dr.
Brian King, of UCL who led the research says they were interested in testing the
theory that heat relieved internal pain such as period cramps and colic.
The
team used DNA technology to make both heat and pain receptor proteins in the
same cell and then observed the molecular interactions between the heat receptor
TRPV1 and the P2X3 pain receptor.
They
found that heat does not just provide comfort and have a placebo effect but the
heat receptor can also block the pain receptor.
This
pain message is apparently activated by ATP, a chemical that pours out of cells
when they are damaged and by blocking the pain receptors, TRPV1 is able to stop
the pain being sensed by the body just as a painkiller does.
Dr.
King says the molecular data showed heat could relieve pain for up to an hour.
He
says the pain of colic, cystitis and period pain is caused by a temporary
reduction in blood flow to or over-distension of hollow organs such as the bowel
or uterus, causing local tissue damage and activating pain receptors.
Dr.
King says the focus of future research will continue to be the discovery and
development of pain relief drugs that will block these P2X3 pain receptors which
are the key to the development of drugs that will alleviate debilitating
internal pain.
Dr.
King hopes his discovery will lead to new pain-relief drugs that could reduce
the need for opiates such as morphine.
The
research was presented to the Physiological Society conference.
(
Juli 2006)