1.Traditional Chinese medicine understanding and treatment strategies for hypertension com plicated by chronic low back pain from perspective of kidney deficiency syndrome.
Zheng-Rong LUO ; Yin-Qiu GAO ; Xing-Jiang XIONG ; Pin LYU ; Xiao-Chen YANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2025;50(4):1121-1131
In China, the number of chronic pain patients has exceeded 300 million, making chronic pain the third major health problem after tumors and cardiovascular diseases. Particularly concerning is the gradual emergence of hypertension and chronic low back pain as public health problems that threaten public health and increase the global economic burden. Modern research shows that the incidence of coexisting hypertension is higher among patients with chronic low back pain. Additionally, evidence indicates that the use of NSAIDs for pain relief can have adverse effects on blood pressure, and some antihypertensive medications may trigger symptoms of low back pain. Thus, addressing chronic pain in hypertensive patients while stabilizing blood pressure is one of the important research questions in the modern treatment of hypertension among middle-aged and elderly individuals. From ancient to modern traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) theory, kidney deficiency has been regarded as the core pathogenesis of low back pain. Recent clinical practices and literature indicate that kidney deficiency plays a crucial role in the modern pathogenesis of hypertension. Both hypertension and chronic low back pain are closely associated with kidney deficiency in TCM theory, revealing a potential mechanism linking the two conditions. Combining the theories of " kidney-essence-marrow" and " nourishing water to moisten wood", a therapeutic strategy centered on tobifying kidney was proposed, including selecting single drugs with kidney-tonifying effects as well as compound formulations and elaborating modern research evidence. The aim is to achieve stable blood pressure control in hypertension patients with chronic low back pain while providing a new treatment perspective for chronic low back pain. This article systematically elaborates on the understanding of hypertension combined with chronic low back pain from both TCM and modern medicine, as well as the therapeutic strategy involving kidney-tonifying drugs, to offer useful references for clinical practice.
Humans
;
Hypertension/complications*
;
Low Back Pain/complications*
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Kidney/drug effects*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Chronic Pain/drug therapy*
2.Effects and mechanisms of Yuxuebi Tablets combined with ibuprofen in treating chronic musculoskeletal pain through "integrated regulation of inflammation and pain-related oxylipins".
Ao-Qing HUANG ; Wen-Li WANG ; Guo-Xin ZHANG ; Ying LIU ; Na LIN ; Chun-Yan ZHU
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2025;50(13):3763-3777
This study adopted a three-dimensional "effect-dose-mechanism" evaluation system to screen the optimal regimen of Yuxuebi Tablets(YXB) combined with ibuprofen(IBU) for chronic musculoskeletal pain(CMP) intervention and elucidate its pharmacological mechanism, so as to provide a scientific basis for the clinical application of the regimen. The experiments were conducted using 8-week-old ICR mice, which were randomly divided into sham operation(sham) group, model(CFA) group, IBU group, YXB group, stasis paralysis tablets combined with ibuprofen low-dose group(IBU-L-YXB), stasis paralysis combined with ibuprofen high-dose group(IBU-H-YXB), stasis paralysis tablets combined with ibuprofen high-dose with ibuprofen discontinuation on the 10th day of administration(IBU-10-YXB), and stasis paralysis tablets combined with ibuprofen high-dose with ibuprofen halving on the 10th day of administration(IBU-1/2-YXB) group. An animal model was established using the CFA plantar injection method. On D0(the second day post-modeling), the success of model establishment was assessed, followed by continuous drug administration for 18 consecutive days from D1 to D18. During this period, mechanical pain threshold was measured by the Von Frey test; thermal hyperalgesia was detected by the hot plate test, and depression-like behavior was observed by the tail suspension test. After treatment, peripheral blood was collected from all groups for complete blood biochemical analysis, and the injected feet of the sham, CFA, IBU, YXB, IBU-YXB, and IBU-10-YXB groups were subjected to oxylipin metabolomics analysis. Immunofluorescence double staining was further performed to detect the co-expression of key oxylipin metabolic enzymes(COX2, LTA4H, and 5/12/15-LOX) and macrophage marker CD68 in the sham, CFA, IBU, and YXB-L/M/H groups. Subsequently, confirmatory analysis of positive indicators was conducted in the sham, CFA, IBU, YXB, IBU-YXB, and IBU-10-YXB groups. On D6(acute phase), mechanical pain sensitivity data showed that compared with the CFA group, only the three combination groups(IBU-YXB, IBU-10-YXB, and IBU-1/2-YXB) exhibited significantly increased paw withdrawal thresholds. On D17(chronic phase), only the IBU-10-YXB group showed a mechanical pain threshold significantly higher than all other monotherapy and combination groups. On D17, thermal pain data showed that compared with the CFA group, all groups except IBU-1/2-YXB had significantly prolonged paw withdrawal latency. On D18, tail suspension data showed that compared with the CFA group, the YXB, IBU-YXB, and IBU-10-YXB groups had significantly reduced immobility time. In summary, IBU-10-YXB stably improved the core symptoms of acute and chronic inflammatory pain. Complete blood count data showed that compared with the sham group, the CFA group had significantly increased mean platelet volume(MPV), while compared with the CFA group, the IBU-YXB and IBU-10-YXB groups had significantly reduced MPV. Moreover, the platelet distribution width(PDW) of the IBU-10-YXB group was further reduced compared with the CFA group. These data suggest that the IBU-10-YXB combination regimen has superior effects on inflammation and blood circulation improvement compared with other treatment groups. At the mechanistic level, each treatment group differentially regulated pro-inflammatory and pro-resolving oxylipin(SPM). Specifically, compared with the CFA group, the IBU and IBU-YXB groups significantly inhibited the synthesis of the prostaglandin family downstream of COX2, reducing pro-inflammatory oxylipins PGD2 and 6-keto-PGF1α but inhibiting PGE1 and PGE2, which played positive roles in peripheral circulation, vasodilation, and inflammation resolution. Compared with the CFA group, the YXB group tended to inhibit the pro-inflammatory oxylipin LTB4 downstream of LTA4H and increase SPMs such as LXA4. The IBU-10-YXB group bidirectionally regulated pro-inflammatory oxylipins and SPMs. Compared with IBU, IBU-10-YXB significantly inhibited the pro-inflammatory mediator 5-HETE. Meanwhile, IBU-10-YXB broadly upregulated SPMs, as evidenced by significant upregulation of LXA4 compared with the CFA group, significant upregulation of LXA5 compared with the IBU and IBU-YXB groups, significant upregulation of RvD1 compared with the CFA group and all other treatment groups, and significant upregulation of RvD5 compared with the sham group. Immunofluorescence double staining results were as follows: compared with the CFA group, the IBU group specifically inhibited the oxylipin metabolic enzyme COX2. In the YXB group, COX2, LTA4H, and 5/12-LOX were significantly inhibited. Within the optimal analgesic dose range, YXB's inhibitory effects on COX2 and LTA4H were dose-dependent, while its inhibitory effects on 5/12-LOX were inversely dose-dependent. The two combination groups(IBU-YXB and IBU-10-YXB) inhibited COX2 and LTA4H without significantly affecting 5-LOX, while IBU-10-YXB further significantly inhibited 12-LOX. These results suggest that the IBU-10-YXB combination regimen effectively maintains stable inhibition of COX2, LTA4H, and 12-LOX while enhancing 5-LOX expression. This combinatorial strategy effectively suppresses pro-inflammatory oxylipins and promotes SPM biosynthesis, overcoming IBU's analgesic ceiling effect and its blockade of pain resolution pathways while compensating for YXB's inability to effectively intervene in acute pain and inflammation. Therefore, it achieves more stable anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and antidepressant effects.
Animals
;
Ibuprofen/administration & dosage*
;
Mice
;
Mice, Inbred ICR
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/administration & dosage*
;
Male
;
Musculoskeletal Pain/immunology*
;
Tablets
;
Humans
;
Chronic Pain/metabolism*
;
Drug Therapy, Combination
;
Disease Models, Animal
3.Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome induces metabolomic changes in expressed prostatic secretions and plasma.
Fang-Xing ZHANG ; Xi CHEN ; De-Cao NIU ; Lang CHENG ; Cai-Sheng HUANG ; Ming LIAO ; Yu XUE ; Xiao-Lei SHI ; Zeng-Nan MO
Asian Journal of Andrology 2025;27(1):101-112
Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CP/CPPS) is a complex disease that is often accompanied by mental health disorders. However, the potential mechanisms underlying the heterogeneous clinical presentation of CP/CPPS remain uncertain. This study analyzed widely targeted metabolomic data of expressed prostatic secretions (EPS) and plasma to reveal the underlying pathological mechanisms of CP/CPPS. A total of 24 CP/CPPS patients from The Second Nanning People's Hospital (Nanning, China), and 35 asymptomatic control individuals from First Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical University (Nanning, China) were enrolled. The indicators related to CP/CPPS and psychiatric symptoms were recorded. Differential analysis, coexpression network analysis, and correlation analysis were performed to identify metabolites that were specifically altered in patients and associated with various phenotypes of CP/CPPS. The crucial links between EPS and plasma were further investigated. The metabolomic data of EPS from CP/CPPS patients were significantly different from those from control individuals. Pathway analysis revealed dysregulation of amino acid metabolism, lipid metabolism, and the citrate cycle in EPS. The tryptophan metabolic pathway was found to be the most significantly altered pathway associated with distinct CP/CPPS phenotypes. Moreover, the dysregulation of tryptophan and tyrosine metabolism and elevation of oxidative stress-related metabolites in plasma were found to effectively elucidate the development of depression in CP/CPPS. Overall, metabolomic alterations in the EPS and plasma of patients were primarily associated with oxidative damage, energy metabolism abnormalities, neurological impairment, and immune dysregulation. These alterations may be associated with chronic pain, voiding symptoms, reduced fertility, and depression in CP/CPPS. This study provides a local-global perspective for understanding the pathological mechanisms of CP/CPPS and offers potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets.
Humans
;
Male
;
Prostatitis/blood*
;
Adult
;
Pelvic Pain/blood*
;
Metabolomics
;
Prostate/metabolism*
;
Middle Aged
;
Chronic Pain/blood*
;
Metabolome
;
Case-Control Studies
;
Tryptophan/blood*
;
Depression/blood*
;
Oxidative Stress/physiology*
;
Chronic Disease
;
Lipid Metabolism/physiology*
4.Non-pharmacological interventions in chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome: A network meta-analysis.
Xiao-Hui WEI ; Meng-Yao MA ; Hang SU ; Tong HU ; Yu-Xin ZHAO ; Xing-Chao LIU ; Hong-Yan BI
National Journal of Andrology 2025;31(3):234-245
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the efficacy of shockwave therapy, acupuncture, hyperthermia, biofeedback therapy, electrical nerve stimulation, magnetotherapy and ultrasound therapy in the treatment of chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome(CP/CPPS), and to provide evidence-based support for clinical decision-making.
METHODS:
Two researchers independently searched PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang, VIP and Chinese Biomedical Literature databases for randomized controlled trials(RCTs) on the effects of different interventions on CP/CPPS from the establishment of the databases to August 2024. We evaluated the quality of the included literature and extracted the relevant data according to the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions, followed by network meta-analysis using Revman 5.3, R 4.33 and Stata17 software.
RESULTS:
A total of 25 RCTs involving 1 794 cases were included. The results of network meta-analysis showed that electrical nerve stimulation, shockwave therapy, biofeedback therapy, magnetotherapy, ultrasound therapy and acupuncture were significantly superior to conventional medication and placebo in the total NIH-CPSI scores(P< 0.05), and so were electrical nerve stimulation and shockwave therapy to acupuncture and hyperthermia(P< 0.05), magnetic therapy to hyperthermia, and ultrasound therapy to placebo(P< 0.05). Shockwave therapy, biofeedback therapy, electrical nerve stimulation, magnetotherapy and ultrasound therapy achieved remarkably better clinical efficacy than conventional medication and placebo in the treatment of CP/CPPS, and so did shockwave therapy than electrical nerve stimulation, hyperthermia, ultrasonic therapy, magnetotherapy and acupuncture.
CONCLUSION
For the treatment of CP/CPPS, electrical nerve stimulation is advantageous over the other interventions in improving total NIH-CPSI scores, and shockwave therapy is advantageous in relieving pain symptoms and clinical efficacy. This conclusion, however, needs to be further verified by more high-quality clinical studies.
Humans
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Biofeedback, Psychology
;
Chronic Disease
;
Electric Stimulation Therapy
;
Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy
;
Magnetic Field Therapy
;
Pelvic Pain/therapy*
;
Prostatitis/therapy*
;
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
;
Ultrasonic Therapy
5.Impact of altitude on NIH-CPSI scores in patients with chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome.
Qiang ZHANG ; Qian TANG ; Xu-Zhen SU ; Rui-Jun XIANG ; Chun-Lei ZHANG ; Bin ZHANG ; De-Hui CHANG
National Journal of Andrology 2025;31(7):619-624
OBJECTIVE:
To analyze the effect of altitude on NIH-CPSI score in patients with chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome(CP/CPPS) Methods: Clinical data and the results of NIH-CPSI Questionnaire of the 321 patients with CP/CPPS at different altitudes were collected from March 2021 to March 2022. And the influence of altitudes on NIH-CPSI score of CP/CPPS was analyzed.
RESULT:
The NIH-CPSI score of patients living at an altitude of 4 300 m was significantly higher than that of patients living at an altitude of 1 500 m and 2 200 m. The CP/CPPS patients who lived in the higher altitude had more severe symptoms of pain and urination as well as lower scores of life quality (P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
NIH-CPSI score increased significantly with higher altitude, indicating more severe symptoms and decreased quality of life in CP/CPPS patients. These findings highlight the need for management strategies for specific heights in patients with CP/CPPS.
Humans
;
Male
;
Prostatitis
;
Altitude
;
Quality of Life
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Pelvic Pain
;
Adult
;
Chronic Disease
;
Middle Aged
6.Association between weight-adjusted waist index and pain: A cross-sectional study.
Huili LIU ; Bei WEN ; Xue BAI ; Ming'an CHEN ; Min LI
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2025;57(1):178-184
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the relationship between the weight-adjusted waist index (WWI) and acute, subacute pain or chronic pain among American adults.
METHODS:
There was a cross-sectional study. Data from the 1999-2004 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) concerning waist circumference, weight, pain status and covariates (age, gender, race, marital status, education level and income, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, and diabetes) were extracted for analysis. Multinomial Logistic regression was conducted across the three models to investigate the associations between WWI and acute, subacute and chronic pain. Model 1 did not involve any adjustments. Model 2 involved adjustments for age, gender, race, marital status, education level, and income. Model 3 was further adjusted for physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking, and diabetes status.
RESULTS:
This study involved 12 694 participants with an average age of (50.6±18.7) years. Among all the participants, 9 614 people (75.74%) had no pain, 870 people (6.85%) experienced acute pain, 354 people (2.79%) suffered from subacute pain, and 1 856 people (14.62%) experienced chronic pain. The WWI of all the participants was (10.95±0.85) cm/$\sqrt{\mathrm{kg}}$, divided into four groups based on quartiles: Group Q1 (7.90-10.36) cm/$\sqrt{\mathrm{kg}}$, group Q2 (10.37-10.94) cm/$\sqrt{\mathrm{kg}}$, group Q3 (10.95-11.53) cm/$\sqrt{\mathrm{kg}}$ and group Q4 (11.54-15.20) cm/$\sqrt{\mathrm{kg}}$. With the increase of WWI, the analysis revealed a significant statistical difference in the participants' acute and chronic pain status (all P < 0.001). In Model 1, the prevalence of acute pain was lower in group Q2 and group Q4 compared with group Q1 (group Q2: OR=0.765, 95%CI: 0.615-0.953, P=0.017; group Q4: OR= 0.648, 95%CI: 0.503-0.835, P < 0.001). Compared with group Q1, the prevalence of chronic pain increased in group Q2, group Q3, and group Q4 (group Q2: OR =1.365, 95%CI: 1.149-1.622, P < 0.001; group Q3: OR=1.291, 95%CI: 1.082-1.541, P=0.005; group Q4: OR=1.874, 95%CI: 1.579-2.224, P < 0.001). In Model 2, compared with group Q1, an increase in chronic pain prevalence was still associated with an increase in WWI in other three groups (group Q2: OR=1.359, 95%CI: 1.137-1.624, P=0.001; group Q3: OR=1.260, 95%CI: 1.039-1.528, P=0.019; group Q4: OR=1.735, 95%CI: 1.413-2.132, P < 0.001). In Model 3, group Q4 had a 49.2% increased prevalence of chronic pain compared to group Q1 (OR = 1.492, 95%CI: 1.208-1.842, P < 0.001). However, in Models 2 and 3, no significant relationship was observed between acute pain and WWI (all P>0.05). And none of the three models identified a significant association between subacute pain and WWI (all P>0.05).
CONCLUSION
For American adults, there was no significant correlation between WWI and acute pain or subacute pain. However, as WWI increases, so does the prevalence of chronic pain. Further validation of this conclusion through large-scale prospective studies is warranted.
Humans
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Middle Aged
;
Male
;
Female
;
Adult
;
Waist Circumference
;
Chronic Pain/epidemiology*
;
Aged
;
Nutrition Surveys
;
Pain/epidemiology*
;
Body Weight
;
Logistic Models
;
Body Mass Index
7.Role and mechanisms of interneurons in chronic pain and pain-induced cognitive impairment.
Qi WANG ; Guangfen ZHANG ; Bo WANG
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2025;50(4):625-630
Chronic pain, a prevalent chronic disease, frequently manifests not only in physical symptoms but also in cognitive impairment, which seriously affects patients' quality of life. Interneurons are multipolar neurons, most of which are inhibitory, serving as crucial connectors within neural networks. They play key roles in signal transmission and fine-tuning of neural activity. In recent years, growing evidence has shown that interneurons are involved in the development of chronic pain and its associated cognitive dysfunction. Investigating the relationship between interneuron dysfunction and chronic pain-related cognitive impairment is of great significance, offering new potential targets and insights for the development of novel therapeutic approaches.
Interneurons/physiology*
;
Humans
;
Chronic Pain/complications*
;
Cognitive Dysfunction/physiopathology*
;
Cognition Disorders/physiopathology*
;
Animals
8.Upregulation of NR2A in Glutamatergic VTA Neurons Contributes to Chronic Visceral Pain in Male Mice.
Meng-Ge LI ; Shu-Ting QU ; Yang YU ; Zhenhua XU ; Fu-Chao ZHANG ; Yong-Chang LI ; Rong GAO ; Guang-Yin XU
Neuroscience Bulletin 2025;41(12):2113-2126
Chronic visceral pain is a persistent and debilitating condition arising from dysfunction or sensitization of the visceral organs and their associated nervous pathways. Increasing evidence suggests that imbalances in central nervous system function play an essential role in the progression of visceral pain, but the exact mechanisms underlying the neural circuitry and molecular targets remain largely unexplored. In the present study, the ventral tegmental area (VTA) was shown to mediate visceral pain in mice. Visceral pain stimulation increased c-Fos expression and Ca2+ activity of glutamatergic VTA neurons, and optogenetic modulation of glutamatergic VTA neurons altered visceral pain. In particular, the upregulation of NMDA receptor 2A (NR2A) subunits within the VTA resulted in visceral pain in mice. Administration of a selective NR2A inhibitor decreased the number of visceral pain-induced c-Fos positive neurons and attenuated visceral pain. Pharmacology combined with chemogenetics further demonstrated that glutamatergic VTA neurons regulated visceral pain behaviors based on NR2A. In summary, our findings demonstrated that the upregulation of NR2A in glutamatergic VTA neurons plays a critical role in visceral pain. These insights provide a foundation for further comprehension of the neural circuits and molecular targets involved in chronic visceral pain and may pave the way for targeted therapies in chronic visceral pain.
Animals
;
Male
;
Visceral Pain/metabolism*
;
Up-Regulation/physiology*
;
Ventral Tegmental Area/metabolism*
;
Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/antagonists & inhibitors*
;
Neurons/drug effects*
;
Mice, Inbred C57BL
;
Mice
;
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/metabolism*
;
Chronic Pain/metabolism*
;
Glutamic Acid/metabolism*
9.Chemokine CCL2 Mediates Neuroglial Crosstalk and Drives Chronic Pain Pathogenesis.
Junyu LU ; Yunxin SHI ; Yongkang LI ; Ziyi NIU ; Shengxi WU ; Ceng LUO ; Rou-Gang XIE
Neuroscience Bulletin 2025;41(12):2296-2321
Chronic pain, frequently comorbid with neuropsychiatric disorders, significantly impairs patients' quality of life and functional capacity. Accumulating evidence implicates the chemokine CCL2 and its receptor CCR2 as key players in chronic pain pathogenesis. This review examines the regulatory mechanisms of the CCL2/CCR2 axis in chronic pain processing at three hierarchical levels: (1) Peripheral Sensitization: CCL2/CCR2 modulates TRPV1, Nav1.8, and HCN2 channels to increase neuronal excitability and CGRP signaling and calcium-dependent exocytosis in peripheral nociceptors to transmit pain. (2) Spinal Cord Central Sensitization: CCL2/CCR2 contributes to NMDAR-dependent plasticity, glial activation, GABAergic disinhibition, and opioid receptor desensitization. (3) Supraspinal Central Networks: CCL2/CCR2 signaling axis mediates the comorbidity mechanisms of pain with anxiety and cognitive impairment within brain regions, including the ACC, CeA, NAc, and hippocampus, and it also increases pain sensitization through the descending facilitation system. Current CCL2/CCR2-targeted therapeutic strategies and their development status are discussed, highlighting novel avenues for chronic pain management.
Humans
;
Chronic Pain/physiopathology*
;
Animals
;
Neuroglia/metabolism*
;
Chemokine CCL2/metabolism*
;
Receptors, CCR2/metabolism*
10.Understanding pain heterogeneity in osteoarthritis patients: a narrative review.
Lin LI ; Xiwei FAN ; Ross CRAWFORD ; Xinzhan MAO ; Louis Jun Ye ONG ; Feng GAO ; Antonia Rujia SUN ; Indira PRASADAM
Frontiers of Medicine 2025;19(5):769-788
The primary clinical manifestation of osteoarthritis (OA) is pain, yet considerable variability exists in the pain experience among OA patients. This narrative review aims to explore the mechanisms driving OA pain heterogeneity to inform the development of targeted interventions that improve treatment efficacy and patient outcomes. A comprehensive literature search was conducted across multiple databases (PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar) for papers published between January 1, 2020, and December 31, 2024. Inclusion criteria focused on studies addressing pain mechanisms and therapeutic interventions in OA. This review identifies key mechanisms of OA pain, including joint alterations, angiogenesis, nervous system involvement, peripheral and central sensitization, and psychosocial factors. It highlights the underlying distinct mechanisms in OA pain, which contribute to the variability in individuals' responses to treatment. It was suggested that interactions between neuroimmune and neurovascular systems are key contributors to chronic pain in OA. This narrative review emphasizes the complexity of OA pain, highlighting the importance of thoroughly understanding the underlying mechanisms for developing personalized and effective pain management strategies. Additional research is required to refine treatment approaches and explore long-term effects.
Humans
;
Osteoarthritis/complications*
;
Pain Management/methods*
;
Chronic Pain/etiology*

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