Affiliation:
1. Molecular Nociception Group, Wolfson Institute for Biomedical Research , University College London , London , UK
2. Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, The Clinical Medical School , University of Cambridge , Cambridge , UK
3. Institute of Human Genetics, Medical Faculty , Uniklinik RWTH Aachen , Pauwelsstr. 30 , Aachen , Germany
Abstract
Abstract
Peripheral sensory neurons are afferent neurons that innervate the skin, joints, bones, muscles, and mucosal tissues. By converting different stimuli into action potentials, they transmit signals for the sensing of temperature, touch, pressure, or pain. This review discusses the known Mendelian disorders which affect pain sensing in humans. For painlessness, these disorders can be classified as developmental, neurodegenerative, or functional, where pain-sensing neurons (nociceptors) are present but cannot be activated or produce action potentials. Affected patients suffer from numbness with recurrent injuries, burns, and poorly healing wounds. For Mendelian disorders of excess pain, aberrant overactivity of nociceptors is a hallmark and leads to paroxysmal or continuous pain states. Again, the effect can be functional or, as in small fiber neuropathies, can be accompanied by degeneration of small unmyelinated nerve fibers in the skin. About 20 different genes are known to cause Mendelian pain disorders and the molecules involved are of general interest for human pain research and as analgesic targets. Comprehensive genetic testing is the key to early diagnosis and adaptation of clinical management.
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
4 articles.
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