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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Topical capsaicin for pain management: therapeutic potential and mechanisms of action of the new high-concentration capsaicin 8% patch

Praveen Anand, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2011 - 
- Vol. 107, Iss: 4, pp 490-502
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TLDR
Evidence suggests that the utility of topical capsaicin may extend beyond painful peripheral neuropathies, and includes longer duration of effect, patient compliance, and low risk for systemic effects or drug–drug interactions.
Abstract
Topical capsaicin formulations are used for pain management. Safety and modest efficacy of low-concentration capsaicin formulations, which require repeated daily self-administration, are supported by meta-analyses of numerous studies. A high-concentration capsaicin 8% patch (Qutenza™) was recently approved in the EU and USA. A single 60-min application in patients with neuropathic pain produced effective pain relief for up to 12 weeks. Advantages of the high-concentration capsaicin patch include longer duration of effect, patient compliance, and low risk for systemic effects or drug–drug interactions. The mechanism of action of topical capsaicin has been ascribed to depletion of substance P. However, experimental and clinical studies show that depletion of substance P from nociceptors is only a correlate of capsaicin treatment and has little, if any, causative role in pain relief. Rather, topical capsaicin acts in the skin to attenuate cutaneous hypersensitivity and reduce pain by a process best described as ‘defunctionalization’ of nociceptor fibres. Defunctionalization is due to a number of effects that include temporary loss of membrane potential, inability to transport neurotrophic factors leading to altered phenotype, and reversible retraction of epidermal and dermal nerve fibre terminals. Peripheral neuropathic hypersensitivity is mediated by diverse mechanisms, including altered expression of the capsaicin receptor TRPV1 or other key ion channels in affected or intact adjacent peripheral nociceptive nerve fibres, aberrant re-innervation, and collateral sprouting, all of which are defunctionalized by topical capsaicin. Evidence suggests that the utility of topical capsaicin may extend beyond painful peripheral neuropathies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Deconstructing the Neuropathic Pain Phenotype to Reveal Neural Mechanisms

TL;DR: The pain phenotype can serve as a window on underlying pathophysiological neural mechanisms and as a guide for developing personalized pain medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropathic Pain: From Mechanisms to Treatment

TL;DR: Neuropathic pain caused by a lesion or disease of the somatosensory nervous system is a common chronic pain condition with major impact on quality of life and the major classes of therapeutics include drugs acting on α2 δsubunits of calcium channels, sodium channels, and descending modulatory inhibitory pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Topical capsaicin (high concentration) for chronic neuropathic pain in adults

TL;DR: The information the authors have suggests that low-concentration topical capsaicin is without meaningful effect beyond that found in placebo creams; given the potential for bias from small study size, this makes it unlikely that it has any meaningful use in clinical practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biological Activities of Red Pepper (Capsicum annuum) and Its Pungent Principle Capsaicin: A Review

TL;DR: Capsaicinoids may have the potential clinical value for pain relief, cancer prevention and weight loss because they are potential agonists of capsaicin receptor (TRPV1).
Journal ArticleDOI

Capsaicin: Current Understanding of Its Mechanisms and Therapy of Pain and Other Pre-Clinical and Clinical Uses

TL;DR: The rationale for other clinical therapeutic uses and implications of capsaicin in diseases such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular conditions, cancer, airway diseases, itch, gastric, and urological disorders are drawn attention.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropathic pain Redefinition and a grading system for clinical and research purposes

TL;DR: A grading system of definite, probable, and possible neuropathic pain is proposed, which includes the grade possible, which can only be regarded as a working hypothesis, and the grades probable and definite, which require confirmatory evidence from a neurologic examination.
Journal Article

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TL;DR: This paper focuses on hot pepper, which is eaten on a daily basis by an estimated one-quarter of the world’s population and has potential to be a biological target for regenerative medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This review focuses on how both human studies and animal models are helping to elucidate the mechanisms underlying neuropathic pain, one of the surprisingly common disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropathic pain: redefinition and a grading system for clinical and research purposes.

José L. Ochoa
- 07 Apr 2009 - 
TL;DR: The clinical resemblance between patients with and without evidence of disease has been taken to indicate that both profiles are neuropathic, but the second profile is not.
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