WHY SCRATCHING MAKES YOU ITCH MORE
Turns out your mom was
right: Scratching an itch only makes it worse. New research from scientists at
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis indicates that scratching
causes the brain to release serotonin, which intensifies the itch sensation.
The findings, in mice,
are reported online in the journalNeuron. The same vicious cycle of
itching and scratching is thought to occur in humans, and the research provides
new clues that may help break that cycle, particularly in people who experience
chronic itching.
Scientists have known
for decades that scratching creates a mild amount of pain in the skin, said
senior investigator Zhou-Feng Chen, PhD, director of Washington University's
Center for the Study of Itch. That pain can interfere with itching -- at least
temporarily -- by getting nerve cells in the spinal cord to carry pain signals
to the brain instead of itch signals.
"The problem is
that when the brain gets those pain signals, it responds by producing the
neurotransmitter serotonin to help control that pain," Chen explained.
"But as serotonin spreads from the brain into the spinal cord, we found
the chemical can 'jump the tracks,' moving from pain-sensing neurons to nerve
cells that influence itch intensity."
Scientists uncovered
serotonin's role in controlling pain decades ago, but this is the first time the
release of the chemical messenger from the brain has been linked to itch, Chen
said.
As part of the study,
the researchers bred a strain of mice that lacked the genes to make serotonin.
When those genetically engineered mice were injected with a substance that
normally makes the skin itch, the mice didn't scratch as much as their normal
littermates. But when the genetically altered mice were injected with
serotonin, they scratched as mice would be expected to in response to compounds
designed to induce itching.
"So this fits
very well with the idea that itch and pain signals are transmitted through
different but related pathways," said Chen, a professor of anesthesiology,
of psychiatry and of developmental biology. "Scratching can relieve itch
by creating minor pain. But when the body responds to pain signals, that
response actually can make itching worse."
Although interfering
with serotonin made mice less sensitive to itch, Chen said it's not practical
to try to treat itching by trying to block the release of serotonin.
Serotonin is involved
in growth, aging, bone metabolism and in regulating mood. Antidepressants like
Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil increase serotonin levels to control depression.
Blocking serotonin would have far-reaching consequences throughout the body,
and people wouldn't have a natural way to control pain.
Instead, Chen
explained, it might be possible to interfere with the communication between
serotonin and nerve cells in the spinal cord that specifically transmit itch.
Those cells, known as GRPR neurons, relay itch signals from the skin to the
brain. To work toward that goal, Chen's team isolated the receptor used by
serotonin to activate GRPR neurons.
To do this, Chen's
team injected mice with a substance that causes itching. They also gave the
mice compounds that activated various serotonin receptors on nerve cells.
Ultimately, they learned that the receptor known as 5HT1A was the key to
activating the itch-specific GRPR neurons in the spinal cord.
To prove they had the
correct receptor, Chen's team also treated mice with a compound that blocked
the 5HT1A receptor, and those mice scratched much less.
"We always have
wondered why this vicious itch-pain cycle occurs," Chen said. "Our
findings suggest that the events happen in this order. First, you scratch, and
that causes a sensation of pain. Then you make more serotonin to control the pain.
But serotonin does more than only inhibit pain. Our new finding shows that it
also makes itch worse by activating GRPR neurons through 5HT1A receptors."
As his team works to
better understand the molecular and cellular mechanisms that control the cycle,
Chen suggested that those who itch pay attention to mom's advice and try not to
scratch.
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