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Study Indicates HF Electrical Stimulation Can Help Reduce Inflammation, Pain

Study Indicates HF Electrical Stimulation Can Help Reduce Inflammation, Pain

Feinstein researchers shed new light on the pain-modulating effect of high-frequency stimulation.

By Michael Barbella, Managing Editor11.03.22
Pain is an important defense mechanism to protect the body and promote healing but constant (chronic) pain can be debilitating. In the United States, 20 million to 50 million adults suffer from chronic pain. New research published by scientists at The Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Bioelectronic Medicine sheds light on the molecular mechanisms that occur when high-frequency electrical stimulation (HFES) is applied transcutaneously (over the skin), which reduces inflammation and pain.
 
High-frequency electrical stimulation therapy, like TrueRelief’s device—which received U.S. Food and Drug Administration clearance in 2021 for acute, chronic and post-operative pain—has been shown to reduce discomfort. But understanding the molecular reasons behind how the device works remained unknown. The research, led by Feinstein Institutes’ Sangeeta Chavan, Ph.D., showed in preclinical mice models that high-frequency electrical stimulation inhibits neuroinflammatory mediator release by sensory neurons, called nociceptors, to reduce pain.
 
“For your body to feel pain, neurons release molecules that kickstart the body’s immune response causing inflammation and pain. High-frequency stimulation therapies have shown to be effective in reducing pain, but the ‘how’ it works remained in question,” said Dr. Chavan, professor at the Institute of Bioelectronic Medicine at the Feinstein Institutes. “This study reveals a previously unidentified mechanism for the pain-modulating effect of high-frequency electrical stimulation, which seems to reset sensory neurons by stopping the release of neuroinflammatory molecules, resulting in less inflammation and pain.”
 
The team uses optogenetics—light to control the activity of neurons—along with pharmacologic and injury-related activation of nociceptors to measure the release of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), substance P and high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), which are pro-inflammatory molecules.
 
The results show that high-frequency electrical stimulation lessens neuroinflammatory mediator release by activated sensory neurons, which suggests that HFES could be used as a preventative therapy for those at high-risk for chronic pain.
 
“Chronic pain can limit a person’s daily activities and is associated with reduced work productivity, anxiety and depression, suicide and overall reduced quality of life. Beyond potentially addictive opioids, chronic pain sufferers struggle to find relief,” said Huan Yang, Ph.D., associate professor at the Institute of Bioelectronic Medicine at the Feinstein Institutes. “We now have a better understanding as to why high-frequency stimulation helps attenuate inflammation and associated pain.”
 
“Until now, assessment of pain has been largely subjective. We now have a quantitative biomarker that correlates directly with pain symptoms and allows us to develop more effective treatments,” added Timir Datta, Ph.D., assistant professor at the Institute of Bioelectronic Medicine at the Feinstein Institutes. “This inflammatory biomarker released by neurons gives us new insight into the role of neuroinflammation in chronic pain.”
 
Further research is needed to understand better the effect high-frequency electrical stimulation has on reducing pain and inflammation, including the potential for HFES to be used as an alternative for opioids. More complete evaluations on the timing (how long, how frequently), ideal waveform and determination placement of electrodes will help advance this novel technology as a viable therapy for chronic pain.
 
“The discovery that neurons produce molecules that cause inflammation represents a major advance,” said Kevin J. Tracey, M.D., president and CEO of the Feinstein Institutes, Karches Family Distinguished Chair in Medical Research and senior author on the paper. “Now this exciting new work shows it is possible to stop inflammation by targeting these neurons with bioelectronic devices.”
 
Drs. Chavan and Yang continue to advance the field of bioelectronic medicine, which combines identifying molecular targets, neuroscience and bioengineering to study how to use devices to treat diseases and injury.
 
Feinstein Institutes Researchers study treatment of post-operative atrial fibrillation (POAF) using bioelectronic medicine to stimulate the vagus nerve.
 
In a 2021 study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, the researchers showed that nerves release a molecule, HMGB1, to produce inflammation in the body, which could lead to a new strategy to develop pharmaceutical and bioelectronic therapies. This observation has been advanced in the current study utilizing high-frequency electrical stimulation to target HMGB1 released by nerves.

The research study was funded in part by TrueRelief.
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