Anesthesiology
333 Cedar Street, TMP 3
PO Box 208051
New Haven, CT 06520-8051
Tel: 203.785.2802
Fax: 203.785.6664
anesthesiology@yale.edu
Experiments on pain examine the functional properties of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in the rodent. We are currently interested in how electrophysiological and neurochemical changes in these properties, occurring after a chronic compression of the DRG (CCD model), lead to behavioral signs of neuropathic pain. This type of pain might be produced in humans, for example, after injuries and degenerative disorders of the spine.
Experiments on itch use psychophysical methods in humans to measure the pruritic and nociceptive sensations and altered sensory states produced by the application of pruritic substances to the skin. As part of a collaborative effort with two other laboratories, our psychophysical findings will be compared with electrophysiologically recorded responses of peripheral nerve fibers and of spinothalamic neurons to the same pruritic stimuli. The goal is to identify neurons mediating itch and itchy skin and to characterize the neurons that modulate pruritic sensations and sensory states. These modulatory neurons might then be targeted in clinical treatments of chronic pruritus.