WASHINGTON – Toxins from cone snail venom may help point the way to better relief of severe nerve pain in people, researchers report.
Results were promising in tests on rats with a type of nerve pain similar to sciatica, according to researchers led by J. Michael McIntosh, a biology professor at the University of Utah.
McIntosh said he hopes this finding could lead to a new painkiller that could be taken orally, but it could take 10 years or more before the findings can be translated into a treatment for people.
The findings were published last week in the online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The researchers found that the toxins from cone snails treated nerve pain by blocking molecules known as “a9a10 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors.”
The receptors are located in several parts of the body, including dorsal root ganglia, a group of nerve cells near the spine that is involved in pain transmission.
Common pain relievers often fail with nerve pain, and stronger drugs have side effects.
The researchers at Utah and Wake Forest University found that the snail toxin can stop nerve pain by blocking the receptor cells, pointing to a potential new target for drugs.
Previously, McIntosh was involved in research that led to the development of Prialt, a pain treatment also based on cone snail toxins that is injected into fluid surrounding the spinal cord to treat severe pain from cancer, AIDS, injury, failed back surgery and certain nervous system disorders.
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