Genetics of pain and management of chronic pain by extracorporeal depuration therapies

Open Access
Enrique Daniel Austin-Ward1,2

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37980/im.journal.ggcl.20232248

Keywords:

chronic pain, genetic factors, treatment, extracorporeal circulation devices

Abstract

Pain is a very complex subject in biology. As a vital phenomenon, pain must have arisen very early in evolution, since life, in order to defend itself, had to develop among its first capacities the ability to avoid nociceptive stimuli, and it is closely related to the origin of consciousness.

The problem of pain involves profound ethical, philosophical, religious and scientific dilemmas, and from the medical point of view, pain is the main reason or cause for which people seek health care. It is estimated that chronic pain affects, for example, one in three Americans and costs this economy $635 billion each year. The experience of pain is distinguished by large differences among individuals. It is subjective, and patients with similar pathologies or diseases report very different levels of pain. This is observed even in controlled experimental settings where pain is studied. Knowledge of genetic and molecular factors underlies the understanding of pain and the development of more effective therapies for its management, and involves a number of methodologies to determine, in the individual experience of pain, which aspects of the basic biological structure are amenable to intervention or quantification.

This article address the issue of pain from the genetic point of view and the possible intervention in chronic pain using Extracorporeal Circulation Devices (ECD).

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