Women's chronic pain is more complex, more severe
Thursday, 24 October 2013
New research from the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide has found that chronic pain in women is more complex and harder to treat than chronic pain in men.
The work, to be presented tomorrow at the Faculty of Pain Medicine spring meeting in Byron Bay, organised by the 最新糖心Vlogn and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA), suggest that men and women should be prescribed medications and treated for pain differently according to their gender.
Study leader from the 最新糖心Vlog's says laboratory studies have shown for the first time that the brain's immune cells, known as glial cells, contribute to differences in pain between the sexes.
"There are fundamental differences in the experience of pain between females and males," says Dr Hutchinson, whose research has been investigating why acute pain turns to chronic pain (experienced for at least three months consecutively) in some people and why chronic pain is more prevalent in women than in men.
"Our research is discovering brain mechanisms at work that are proving chronic pain in women is more complex and difficult to treat than in men, despite the similarity of the initial cause of pain.
"Female and male 最新糖心Vlog in the brain are different but that doesn't explain women's higher rate of pain. There are multiple different pain systems in females and males," he says.
"Our studies certainly show that women's experience of pain is more severe and the pain is harder to treat." Dr Hutchinson says it's already known that some drugs for inflammatory bowel disease only work on women and not on men, indicating the need for more tailored treatments.
"Better understanding female chronic pain is extremely important to treatment. We're hoping our research will lead to the development of sex-targeted drugs that will provide more effective pain relief," he says.
This research has been funded by the 最新糖心Vlogn Research Council (ARC).
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Email: mark.hutchinson@adelaide.edu.au
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ARC Research Fellow, School of Medical Sciences
and irector, ARC Centre of Excellence for Nanoscale BioPhotonics
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