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      Visceral pain from colon and rectum: the mechanotransduction and biomechanics

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      Journal of Neural Transmission
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          Visceral pain is the cardinal symptom of functional gastrointestinal (GI) disorders like the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and the leading cause of patients’ visit to gastroenterologists. IBS-related visceral pain usually arises from the distal colon and rectum (colorectum), an intraluminal environment that differs greatly from environment outside the body in chemical, biological, thermal and mechanical conditions. Accordingly, visceral pain is different from cutaneous pain in several key psychophysical characteristics, which likely underlies the unsatisfactory management of visceral pain by drugs developed for other types of pain. Colorectal visceral pain is usually elicited from mechanical distension/stretch, rather than from heating, cutting, pinching, or piercing that usually evoke pain from the skin. Thus, mechanotransduction, i.e., the encoding of colorectal mechanical stimuli by sensory afferents is crucial to the underlying mechanisms of GI-related visceral pain. This review will focus on colorectal mechanotransduction, the process of converting colorectal mechanical stimuli into trains of action potentials by the sensory afferents to inform the central nervous system (CNS). We will summarize neurophysiological studies on afferent encoding of colorectal mechanical stimuli, highlight recent advances in our understanding of colorectal biomechanics that plays critical roles in mechanotransduction, and review studies on mechanosensitive ion channels in colorectal afferents. This review calls for focused attention on targeting colorectal mechanotransduction as a new strategy for managing visceral pain, which can also have an added benefit of limited CNS side effects because mechanotransduction arises from peripheral organs.

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          Most cited references7

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          Cutaneous Mechanoreceptors and Nociceptors

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            Pain

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              The Gastrointestinal System:Gastrointestinal, Nutritional and Hepatobiliary Physiology

              PS Leung (2014)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Journal of Neural Transmission
                J Neural Transm
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0300-9564
                1435-1463
                April 2020
                October 09 2019
                April 2020
                : 127
                : 4
                : 415-429
                Article
                10.1007/s00702-019-02088-8
                7141966
                31598778
                a6b93ae8-a616-450a-bd89-b0e0caa45ad9
                © 2020

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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