Author:
Tonc Elena,Omwanda Gloriah K.,Tovar Kevin Arnold,Golden Xiu Mei Emma,Chatterjea Devavani
Abstract
Vulvodynia is a debilitating condition characterized by painful sensitivity to touch and pressure in the vestibular tissue surrounding the vaginal opening. It is often a “diagnosis of exclusion” of idiopathic pain made in the absence of visible inflammation or injury. However, the association between increased vulvodynia risk and a history of yeast infections and skin allergies has led researchers to explore whether immune mechanisms of dysregulated inflammation might underlie the pathophysiology of this chronic pain condition. Here we synthesize epidemiological investigations, clinical biopsies and primary cell culture studies, and mechanistic insights from several pre-clinical models of vulvar pain. Taken together, these findings suggest that altered inflammatory responses of tissue fibroblasts, and other immune changes in the genital tissues, potentially driven by the accumulation of mast cells may be key to the development of chronic vulvar pain. The association of increased numbers and function of mast cells with a wide variety of chronic pain conditions lends credence to their involvement in vulvodynia pathology and underscores their potential as an immune biomarker for chronic pain. Alongside mast cells, neutrophils, macrophages, and numerous inflammatory cytokines and mediators are associated with chronic pain suggesting immune-targeted approaches including the therapeutic administration of endogenous anti-inflammatory compounds could provide much needed new ways to treat, manage, and control the growing global pandemic of chronic pain.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Immunology,Microbiology
Reference72 articles.
1. Pain, mast cells, and nerves in peritoneal, ovarian, and deep infiltrating endometriosis;Anaf;Fertil. Steril.,2006
2. Repeated vaginal exposures to the common cosmetic and household preservative methylisothiazolinone induce persistent, mast cell-dependent genital pain in ND4 mice;Arriaga-Gomez;Int. J. Mol. Sci.,2019
3. Characterization of early inflammatory events leading to provoked vulvodynia development in rats;Awad-Igbaria;J. Inflamm. Res.,2022
4. Cytokinergic IgE action in mast cell activation;Bax;Front. Immunol.,2012
5. Mast cells exert pro-inflammatory effects of relevance to the pathophyisology of tendinopathy;Behzad;Arthritis Res. Ther.,2013
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献