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Neurology
Researchers find hidden sensory system in the skin
Researchers report that the human body has an entirely unique and separate
sensory system aside from the nerves that give most of us the ability to touch
and feel. Surprisingly, this sensory network is located throughout our blood
vessels and sweat glands, and is for most people, largely imperceptible. This
discovery may shed light on the causes of unexplained chronic pain conditions
such as fibromyalgia. Middle East Health reports.
The human sensory experience
is far more complex and
nuanced than previously
thought, according to a
groundbreaking new study
published in the 15 December
issue of the journal Pain. In
the article, researchers at
Albany Medical College, the
University of Liverpool and
Cambridge University report
that the human body has an
entirely unique and separate
sensory system aside from the
nerves that give most of us the
ability to touch and feel.
Surprisingly, this sensory
network is located throughout
our blood vessels and sweat
glands, and is for most people,
largely imperceptible.
“It’s almost like hearing the
subtle sound of a single instrument
in the midst of a
symphony,” said senior author
Frank Rice, PhD, a
Neuroscience Professor at
Albany Medical College
(AMC), who is a leading
authority on the nerve supply
to the skin. “It is only when
we shift focus away from the
nerve endings associated with
normal skin sensation that we
can appreciate the sensation
hidden in the background.”
The research team discovered
this hidden sensory system
by studying two unique patients who were diagnosed
with a previously unknown
abnormality by lead author
David Bowsher, MD, Honorary
Senior Research Fellow at the
University of Liverpool’s Pain
Research Institute. These
patients had an extremely rare
condition called congenital
insensitivity to pain, meaning
that they were born with very
little ability to feel pain. Other
rare individuals with this
condition have excessively dry
skin, often mutilate themselves
accidentally and usually have
severe mental handicaps.
“Although they had a few accidents
over their lifetimes, what
made these two patients
unique was that they led
normal lives. Excessive
sweating brought them to the
clinic, where we discovered
their severe lack of pain sensation,”
said Dr Bowsher.
“Curiously, our conventional
tests with sensitive instruments
revealed that all their skin
sensation was severely
impaired, including their
response to different temperatures
and mechanical contact.
But, for all intents and
purposes, they had adequate
sensation for daily living and
could tell what is warm and
cold, what is touching them,
and what is rough and
smooth.”
The mystery deepened
when Dr Bowsher sent skin
biopsies across the ocean to Dr
Rice’s laboratory, which
focuses on multi-molecular
microscopic analyses of nerve
endings in the skin, especially
in relation to chronic pain
conditions such as those
caused by nerve injuries,
diabetes, and shingles. These
unique analyses were
pioneered by Dr Rice at
Albany Medical College
(AMC) along with collaborators
at the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm,
Sweden. “Under normal
conditions, the skin contains
many different types of nerve
endings that distinguish
between different temperatures,
different types of
mechanical contact such as
vibrations from a cell phone
and movement of hairs, and,
importantly, painful stimuli,”
said Dr Rice. “Much to our
surprise, the skin we received
from England lacked all the
nerve endings that we
normally associated with skin
sensation. So how were these
individuals feeling anything?”
The answer appeared to be
in the presence of sensory
nerve endings on the small
blood vessels and sweat glands
embedded in the skin. “For
many years, my colleagues and
I have detected different types
of nerve endings on tiny blood
vessels and sweat glands,
which we assumed were simply
regulating blood flow and
sweating. We didn’t think they
could contribute to conscious
sensation. However, while all
the other sensory endings were
missing in this unusual skin,
the blood vessels and sweat
glands still had the normal
types of nerve endings.
Apparently, these unique individuals
are able to ‘feel things’
through these remaining nerve
endings,” said Dr Rice. “What
we learned from these unusual
individuals is that there’s
another level of sensory feedback
that can give us conscious
tactile information. Problems
with these nerve endings may
contribute to mysterious pain
conditions such as migraine
headaches and fibromyalgia,
the sources of which are still
unknown, making them very
difficult to treat.”
● Citation: Bowsher D, et al.
Absence of pain with hyperhidrosis:
A new syndrome
where vascular afferents may
mediate cutaneous sensation.
PAIN. 2009 Dec 15;147(1-
3):287-98.

Date
of upload: 26th Jan 2010
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