Already a well-established treatment for different autonomic and movement disorders, the use of botulinum toxin type A (BoNT/A) in pain conditions is now continuously expanding. Currently, the only approved use of BoNT/A in relation to pain is the treatment of chronic migraines. However, controlled clinical studies show promising results in neuropathic and other chronic pain disorders. In comparison with other conventional and non-conventional analgesic drugs, the greatest advantages of BoNT/A use are its sustained effect after a single application and its safety. Its efficacy in certain therapy-resistant pain conditions is of special importance. Novel results in recent years has led to a better understanding of its actions, although further experimental and clinical research is warranted. Here, we summarize the effects contributing to these advantageous properties of BoNT/A in pain therapy, specific actions along the nociceptive pathway, consequences of its central activities, the molecular mechanisms of actions in neurons, and general pharmacokinetic parameters.
BackgroundInfraorbital nerve constriction (IoNC) is an experimental model of trigeminal neuropathy. We investigated if IoNC is accompanied by dural extravasation and if botulinum toxin type A (BoNT/A) can reduce pain and dural extravasation in this model.Methodology/Principal FindingsRats which developed mechanical allodynia 14 days after the IoNC were injected with BoNT/A (3.5 U/kg) into vibrissal pad. Allodynia was tested by von Frey filaments and dural extravasation was measured as colorimetric absorbance of Evans blue - plasma protein complexes. Presence of dural extravasation was also examined in orofacial formalin-induced pain. Unilateral IoNC, as well as formalin injection, produced bilateral dural extravasation. Single unilateral BoNT/A injection bilaterally reduced IoNC induced dural extravasation, as well as allodynia (lasting more than 2 weeks). Similarly, BoNT/A reduced formalin-induced pain and dural extravasation. Effects of BoNT/A on pain and dural extravasation in IoNC model were dependent on axonal transport through sensory neurons, as evidenced by colchicine injections (5 mM, 2 µl) into the trigeminal ganglion completely preventing BoNT/A effects.Conclusions/SignificanceTwo different types of pain, IoNC and formalin, are accompanied by dural extravasation. The lasting effect of a unilateral injection of BoNT/A in experimental animals suggests that BoNT/A might have a long-term beneficial effect in craniofacial pain associated with dural neurogenic inflammation. Bilateral effects of BoNT/A and dependence on retrograde axonal transport suggest a central site of its action.
A peripheral application of botulinum toxin type A (7 U/kg) has significantly reduced thermal and mechanical hypersensitivity in rats with the partial sciatic nerve transection as a classical model of surgical neuropathy.
Botulinum toxin type A (BTX-A) has a long-lasting antinociceptive activity and less clear effect on inflammation. It was proposed that these two effects share the same mechanism--the inhibition of neurotransmitter exocytosis from peripheral nerve endings. However, till now possible anti-inflammatory action of BTX-A did not evoke much attention. In the present paper, we investigate possible anti-inflammatory action of the toxin in carrageenan and capsaicin models of inflammation in rats. BTX-A (5 and 10 U/kg) was injected into the plantar surface of the rat right hind-paw pad 5 days before the injection of the carrageenan (1%) or capsaicin (0.1%) at the same site. Carrageenan-induced paw oedema and capsaicin-induced protein extravasation were measured. Control, inflamed and BTX-A pretreated inflamed paws were photographed and histopathological analysis (haematoxylin & eosin) was performed. Pretreatment with BTX-A had no effect on the size of carrageenan-induced paw oedema, measured as paw volume and weight or capsaicin-induced plasma extravasations, measured by Evans blue as a marker of protein leakage. Neither macroscopic nor microscopic analysis showed a significant difference between BTX-A pretreated and control inflamed tissue. Results show dissociation between the effect of BTX-A on pain and inflammation thus questioning the validity of the suggested assumption about the common peripheral mechanism of action.
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