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Canada Research Chairs focus on getting to the root of chronic inflammation and pain

- June 2, 2022

Millions of Canadians suffer every day from the effects of chronic inflammation and pain. (David Akshar photo/Unsplash)
Millions of Canadians suffer every day from the effects of chronic inflammation and pain. (David Akshar photo/Unsplash)

Our bodies are still very much a mystery. What causes tissues to chronically swell and pain to strike without reprieve can often elude doctors. But two 黑料吃瓜网medical researchers shedding light on these issues will have their investigations boosted with provided by the Canada Research Chairs (CRC) program.

Today (June 2), was announced as a Tier 1 CRC and was renewed for a second term as a Tier 2 CRC. The CRC program provides the funding necessary for Canada鈥檚 post-secondary institutions to attract and retain the world鈥檚 best research talent.

鈥淢illions of Canadians suffer every day from the effects of chronic inflammation and pain. These conditions have a profound impact on physical and mental health, family life, society, and the economy. It is gratifying to know that breakthroughs by Drs. Fairn and Hashmi are moving us closer to finding the solutions to the suffering,鈥 says Alice Aiken, Dalhousie鈥檚 vice president research and innovation.

The painful truth

Among other areas of study, Dr. Fairn (pictured below) is attempting to pinpoint the painful truth behind Crohn鈥檚 disease, a condition resulting from chronic inflammation in the gut. He says that while inflammation serves a valuable function in clearing out pathogens and damaged tissue when we get cuts or infections, it can cause serious problems if it lingers.



鈥淎 perfectly healthy person has low inflammation. Their body can respond to a threat and then return to normal,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith Crohn鈥檚 disease, a person鈥檚 set point has changed. They can mount a response to an acute threat, but they never go back to a normal baseline. This is because the lining and the microbiome in the gut is changed resulting in chronic inflammation.鈥

It's a painful condition leading to flare ups, hospital stays, lost days of work and continual discomfort. It is something many Nova Scotians know all too well, says Dr. Fairn, noting that the province has the highest incidence of Crohn鈥檚 disease in the world.

Refusing the fat


A recent discovery by Dr. Fairn and his research group should provide Crohn鈥檚 patients some hope for a healthier future. Mutations in the 鈥淣OD2鈥 gene are a major risk factor for developing Crohn鈥檚 disease. The team discovered that NOD2 proteins require the addition of two fat molecules to respond to bacterial threats while also contributing to a healthy microbiome. But in people with the mutant versions of NOD2 the fats aren鈥檛 attached.

鈥淪o, we went after the machinery in the cell that regulates the modification,鈥 says Dr. Fairn. 鈥淭here are enzymes that put the modification on NOD2 and different enzymes that take them off. So, we said 鈥極kay, we just need to change the balance to restore NOD2 function.鈥欌

Related reading: 黑料吃瓜网grows its ranks of Canada Research Chairs

Dr. Fairn and his team have identified 鈥渄rug-like鈥 molecules that allow them to modify NOD2鈥檚 defects to make it behave as it should. The results have drawn interest from pharmaceutical companies that see promise in the innovation to bring treatment to Crohn鈥檚 patients in the future.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got the cell biology and the test tube work done. The next step will be conducting animal studies to determine if this really could be beneficial for patients. I would say we鈥檙e halfway there.鈥

Alongside his CRC, Dr. Fairn will receive $322,660 from the Canada Foundation for Innovation and the equivalent amount from Research Nova Scotia for research infrastructure.

The truth about pain


鈥淥ne of the least understood and most tasking problems that we face as Canadians is chronic pain. So many people have debilitating pain and yet we don鈥檛 even know the basics of the mechanism,鈥 says Dr. Hashmi, pictured right.

It remains largely a mystery why an estimated 7.63 million Canadians, or one in four people aged 15 or older, live with chronic pain, according to the Canadian Pain Task Force Report: October 2020. Now considered a disease in its own right, Dr. Hashmi says pain robs people of their ability to fully engage in life and leaves them desperate for answers.

鈥淔or some people there are things that can be fixed through surgery. But for others there is nothing physically wrong that doctors can say 鈥榶our pain is due to that,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淭hink about that. Here you have a person who is feeling that something is wrong with their body. That is a very anxiety provoking and stressful thing. And then the doctors are saying, 鈥楴o there is nothing wrong with you.鈥欌

The whole truth


This is why Dr. Hashmi is taking a more holistic approach to studying pain. She says there is only so much you can learn from focusing on receptors and spinal mechanisms. She asserts that a lot more can be understood from pain perception and its neural mechanisms, noting that involuntary predictions our brains make about the pain we expect to feel can alter the pain we actually feel.

So, in addition to the brain scans common to traditional pain research, Dr. Hashmi maps brain activity while participants evaluate pain, conducts cognitive tests, employs questionnaires, and analyses clinical data to understand the full scope of the pain experience. She and her team are building a large data set that pulls in the full range of information collected to build models that are more capable of providing comprehensive results.

Her lab is also developing novel analytical and machine learning tools for studying structural and functional connections in the brain that contribute to our perception of pain and the decisions we make as a result. Their work has identified some key neural pathways in the brain and brain stem that are known to change pain intensity based on expectations. This has allowed them to identify ways to improve diagnosis and treatment for chronic pain patients.

鈥淥ften it is thought that patients are too fearful of pain and aren鈥檛 thinking about their pain experience correctly. However, our data is showing that there is something that has shifted in their brain so that they perceive pain differently from the way a person without chronic pain does. Our research shows that chronic pain has its origin in neurobiology, and it is not a voluntary choice where we can simply ask patients to snap out of it鈥 says Dr. Hashmi.