Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity

Objective: The pathophysiology of chronic pain is complex, with most of our knowledge being derived from preclinical studies. The search for biomarkers mirroring the pathophysiology of chronic pain is ongoing, and there is an increasing interest in saliva as a diagnostic tool. Given what is known ab...

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Main Authors: Thomas F. Kallman, Bijar Ghafouri, Emmanuel Bäckryd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-08-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844018323818
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spelling doaj-050868ae7457459a837d097d61e905c32020-11-25T02:07:05ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402018-08-0148e00718Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensityThomas F. Kallman0Bijar Ghafouri1Emmanuel Bäckryd2Pain and Rehabilitation Centre, and Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, SwedenPain and Rehabilitation Centre, and Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, SwedenCorresponding author.; Pain and Rehabilitation Centre, and Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, SwedenObjective: The pathophysiology of chronic pain is complex, with most of our knowledge being derived from preclinical studies. The search for biomarkers mirroring the pathophysiology of chronic pain is ongoing, and there is an increasing interest in saliva as a diagnostic tool. Given what is known about salivary substance P and salivary gland innervation, we hypothesized that salivary substance P and/or beta-endorphin might reflect the basal activity of these neuropeptides in the central nervous system, thereby perhaps mirroring a general propensity to chronic pain. Based on this overall hypothesis, our aim was to compare salivary levels of these neuropeptides in chronic neuropathic pain patients with healthy controls. An additional aim was to relate salivary levels to plasma levels. Materials and methods: We compared salivary concentrations of beta-endorphin and substance P in 14 chronic neuropathic pain patients with concentrations in 18 healthy controls using a Luminex technology kit. Salivary-to-plasma quotients were also calculated. Results: We found no significant difference between the groups' salivary concentrations of substance P and beta-endorphin. No correlation was found between salivary and plasma concentrations of each neuropeptide, which we hypothesize might point to local production of beta-endorphin and/or substance P in the salivary glands. Given high substance P salivary-to-plasma quotients, such a local production seems more likely for substance P than for beta-endorphin. Conclusions: Propensity to neuropathic chronic pain was not substantiated by our analysis of salivary levels of substance P and/or beta-endorphin. However, we report salivary-to-plasma quotients that give potentially important physiological insight about these neuropeptides.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844018323818NeurologyNeuroscience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas F. Kallman
Bijar Ghafouri
Emmanuel Bäckryd
spellingShingle Thomas F. Kallman
Bijar Ghafouri
Emmanuel Bäckryd
Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
Heliyon
Neurology
Neuroscience
author_facet Thomas F. Kallman
Bijar Ghafouri
Emmanuel Bäckryd
author_sort Thomas F. Kallman
title Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
title_short Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
title_full Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
title_fullStr Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
title_full_unstemmed Salivary beta-endorphin and substance P are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
title_sort salivary beta-endorphin and substance p are not biomarkers of neuropathic chronic pain propensity
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Objective: The pathophysiology of chronic pain is complex, with most of our knowledge being derived from preclinical studies. The search for biomarkers mirroring the pathophysiology of chronic pain is ongoing, and there is an increasing interest in saliva as a diagnostic tool. Given what is known about salivary substance P and salivary gland innervation, we hypothesized that salivary substance P and/or beta-endorphin might reflect the basal activity of these neuropeptides in the central nervous system, thereby perhaps mirroring a general propensity to chronic pain. Based on this overall hypothesis, our aim was to compare salivary levels of these neuropeptides in chronic neuropathic pain patients with healthy controls. An additional aim was to relate salivary levels to plasma levels. Materials and methods: We compared salivary concentrations of beta-endorphin and substance P in 14 chronic neuropathic pain patients with concentrations in 18 healthy controls using a Luminex technology kit. Salivary-to-plasma quotients were also calculated. Results: We found no significant difference between the groups' salivary concentrations of substance P and beta-endorphin. No correlation was found between salivary and plasma concentrations of each neuropeptide, which we hypothesize might point to local production of beta-endorphin and/or substance P in the salivary glands. Given high substance P salivary-to-plasma quotients, such a local production seems more likely for substance P than for beta-endorphin. Conclusions: Propensity to neuropathic chronic pain was not substantiated by our analysis of salivary levels of substance P and/or beta-endorphin. However, we report salivary-to-plasma quotients that give potentially important physiological insight about these neuropeptides.
topic Neurology
Neuroscience
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844018323818
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