Inflammation After Surgery: How It Can Prolong Pain

A new study suggests ​taking anti-inflammatory drugs after surgery may be ​backfiring and that blocking inflammation during this critical time may, in‍ fact, delay recovery and prolong pain rather⁤ than ⁢relieve it.

In the study in the Journal ⁢of Pain Research, the researchers report that letting inflammation run its⁤ course led to a quicker cessation of pain‌ and an overall quicker recovery after a surgery or injury.

“The idea was that blocking inflammation would reduce pain ” says Geoffroy Laumet, ⁣the study’s senior author and ⁤associate​ professor in the physiology department ‌and the neuroscience program at Michigan State University.

“Instead, blocking inflammation increased pain in the long run. It was an unexpected result.”

The team used a mouse model to ‍study postoperative pain wiht ⁣versus without activity from a key immune signaling molecule called​ TNF-α,​ or tumor necrosis factor alpha. To‍ compare, they inhibited TNF-α, which is involved in ‍promoting‍ inflammation, and ​mimicked surgery with a small incision. They expected that blocking TNF-α would reduce pain, but⁤ the opposite ⁢happened: The mice stayed in ​pain for much longer.

“It prevented the body from turning off the⁣ pain normally,” Laumet explains.

Laumet initially​ thought the result was a glitch. But after the experiment was repeated by multiple ‌lab members and using three ‍different methods for inhibiting TNF-α-including Etanercept, an FDA-approved drug used in humans-the ⁣findings were clear.

If you look across‌ all ⁣types of surgeries-anything from an extracted tooth to a hip replacement-the pain resolves normally for 90%‌ of patients. But the other 10% develop chronic pain, Laumet says.That ‌persistent pain is very hard to treat;⁢ it’s very resistant ​to medication and it can last for years.

More than 40 million Americans undergo surgery each year-meaning an estimated 4 million Americans develop chronic postsurgical pain annually. Laumet’s work suggests‍ the body’s ability to promote TNF-α in response ​to the injury from the surgical⁣ incision⁣ could be a critical factor in whether a person’s pain resolves or ‌not.

Should you throw⁢ out your ibuprofen? Not exactly. There are many different molecules in the body involved in inflammation, pain, and healing.

“We don’t have a good understanding of what is‌ doing what, so the​ key will be to identify which molecules are contributing to​ pain and which are contributing to the resolution ⁣of pain,” Laumet says. “The ⁢goal is to target the bad and keep the good ones.”

Even though this study suggests‍ that blocking ⁤TNF-α after surgery⁢ is ⁤highly likely unwise, there are other⁤ scenarios where it may still make​ sense, such⁣ as improving mobility by reducing arthritic inflammation in the joints for autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis.

“Inflammation⁢ is not necessarily a bad thing,” ⁢Laumet says. “Yes, it hurts,⁢ but it’s also working on⁣ the inside​ to⁢ promote the resolution of that pain.​ The idea in the medical field that when you have an injury, you should absolutely block the inflammation right away might not always be⁢ the best strategy.”

Does Laumet think that one day we’ll be able to ⁤block the pain but allow ⁣the healing inflammation? “Yeah, I do think so,” he says. “If not, I would do a different job.”

Source: Michigan State University

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