Journal article

Complex regional pain syndrome patient immunoglobulin M has pronociceptive effects in the skin and spinal cord of tibia fracture mice


Authors listGuo, Tian-Zhi; Wei, Tzuping; Tajerian, Maral; Clark, J. David; Birklein, Frank; Goebel, Andreas; Li, Wen-Wu; Sahbaie, Peyman; Escolano, Fabiola L.; Herrnberger, Myriam; Kramer, Heidrum H.; Kingery, Wade S.

Publication year2020

Pages797-809

JournalPAIN

Volume number161

Issue number4

ISSN0304-3959

eISSN1872-6623

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001765

PublisherLippincott, Williams & Wilkins


Abstract
It has been proposed that complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a post-traumatic autoimmune disease. Previously, we observed that B cells are required for the full expression of CRPS-like changes in a mouse tibia fracture model and that serum immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies from fracture mice have pronociceptive effects in muMT fracture mice lacking B cells. The current study evaluated the pronociceptive effects of injecting CRPS patient serum or antibodies into muMT fracture mice by measuring hind paw allodynia and unweighting changes. Complex regional pain syndrome serum binding was measured against autoantigens previously identified in the fracture mouse model. Both CRPS patient serum or IgM antibodies had pronociceptive effects in the fracture limb when injected systemically in muMT fracture mice, but normal subject serum and CRPS patient IgG antibodies had no effect. Furthermore, CRPS serum IgM antibodies had pronociceptive effects when injected into the fracture limb hind paw skin or intrathecally in the muMT fracture mice. Early (1-12 months after injury) CRPS patient (n = 20) sera were always pronociceptive after systemic injection, and chronic (>12 months after injury) CRPS sera were rarely pronociceptive (2/20 patients), while sera from normal subjects (n = 20) and from patients with uncomplicated recoveries from orthopedic surgery and/or fracture (n = 15) were never pronociceptive. Increased CRPS serum IgM binding was observed for keratin 16, histone 3.2, gamma actin, and alpha enolase autoantigens. We postulate that CRPS patient IgM antibodies bind to neoantigens in the fracture mouse skin and spinal cord to initiate a regionally restricted pronociceptive complement response potentially contributing to the CRPS disease process.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGuo, T., Wei, T., Tajerian, M., Clark, J., Birklein, F., Goebel, A., et al. (2020) Complex regional pain syndrome patient immunoglobulin M has pronociceptive effects in the skin and spinal cord of tibia fracture mice, PAIN, 161(4), pp. 797-809. https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001765

APA Citation styleGuo, T., Wei, T., Tajerian, M., Clark, J., Birklein, F., Goebel, A., Li, W., Sahbaie, P., Escolano, F., Herrnberger, M., Kramer, H., & Kingery, W. (2020). Complex regional pain syndrome patient immunoglobulin M has pronociceptive effects in the skin and spinal cord of tibia fracture mice. PAIN. 161(4), 797-809. https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001765



Keywords


AUTOIMMUNITYComplex regional pain syndromeIMMUNOGLOBULININFLAMMATORY CHANGESNOCICEPTIVE SENSITIZATIONPAINRAT MODELREFLEX SYMPATHETIC DYSTROPHYSIGNALING CONTRIBUTES

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:10