¾«Æ·¹ú²úÒ»Çø¶þÇøÌÒÉ«

Journal News

How chronic pain shows up in urine

Researchers distinguish urinary pelvic pain from healthy controls — and from other chronic pain diseases
Renae   Crossing
May 10, 2022

Chronic pain diseases are underresearched — particularly for women, particularly with pelvic pain. . For people with urinary chronic pelvic pain syndrome, or UCPPS, the need to urinate is particularly frequent or urgent, or pelvic pain is prominent, or both. It’s often simply a diagnosis of exclusion, and there is a lack of effective treatments.

Urine sample

Using , researchers have been able to distinguish UCPPS from other chronic pain diseases, including myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, or ME/CFS, as well as fibromyalgia and irritable bowel syndrome.

According to in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics, lurking in urine all along were pronounced differences in the proteins related to chronic pain for different sexes — and leads for diagnosis and treatment.

We often think of pain in terms of blunt force, but the workings of chronic pain are more like pulling thousands of tiny strings in the theater of a cell. To develop new treatments and diagnostics, we need to know which proteins are pulling strings or playing other parts.

Finding those proteins is the most powerful aspect of this study, according to first author John Froehlich, professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School. He said his team is “measuring the real things that carry out functions,” along with the upstream bosses of those things.

Why not a blood test? Urine is close to the pelvis and can be more sensitive than blood (or not as good at homeostasis). Also, patients are happy: one less jab for a blood draw.

In a , the scientists received 244 urine samples from the masses, (that is, for the technique called mass spectrometry), blasted them to smithereens — smithereens ordered by mass and charge, for identification — and loaded the data onto the Proteome Discoverer version 2.2.

What did they find?

The levels of .

There were parts of the scaffolds in between cells, and proteins involved in inflammation. The researchers found proteins known for increasing bleeding (previously implicated in UCPPS), for reducing the migration of immune cells, and for the development of epithelial tissue — the lining around blood vessels and organs or their cavities. They also found proteins that work in the postal service of cells, the Golgi.

But what if these protein patterns were due to chronic pain generally, not uniquely UCPPS?

The scientists ran comparisons with people with other chronic pain diseases, and uniquely in UCPPS. Next, the team wants to conduct a larger study to see if these unconventional fingerprints correlate with disease or duration.

Froehlich said he would be “tickled” if other researchers mined the to help people with chronic pain diseases. The growing global burden of ME/CFS includes an .

Froehlich calls corresponding author a “powerhouse” behind this research.

He also credits his mother. After completing a Ph.D. on (“My mom was a midwife”), Froehlich pivoted to a fluid with its own sort of richness. He simply changed streams.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Renae   Crossing

Renae Crossing is a writer and former teacher. She holds a first-class master’s degree in life science from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and a first-class master’s in teaching from the University of Melbourne.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Parsing plant pigment pathways
Webinar

Parsing plant pigment pathways

June 13, 2025

Erich Grotewold of Michigan State University, an ASBMB Breakthroughs speaker, discusses his work on the genetic regulation of flavonoid biosynthesis.

Calcium channel linked to cancer drug resistance
Journal News

Calcium channel linked to cancer drug resistance

June 12, 2025

Researchers discover a protein associated with carboplatin-resistant retinoblastoma, suggesting this protein could be a promising therapeutic target. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Host fatty acids enhance dengue virus infectivity
Journal News

Host fatty acids enhance dengue virus infectivity

June 12, 2025

Researchers in Germany find that viral replication depends on host enzymes that synthesize lipids, revealing potential metabolic targets for antiviral intervention. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Antibodies inhibit hyperactive protein disposal
Journal News

Antibodies inhibit hyperactive protein disposal

June 12, 2025

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, identify an enzyme inhibitor, offering new tools to study diseases like cystic fibrosis, neurodegeneration and cancer. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Scientists find unexpected correlation between age and HDL-C levels
Journal News

Scientists find unexpected correlation between age and HDL-C levels

June 3, 2025

In a 30-year multicenter study, researchers determined what factors predict HDL-C concentration. In their analysis, they found that HDL-C levels grew with increasing age and physical activity.

Butter, olive oil, coconut oil — what to choose?
Journal News

Butter, olive oil, coconut oil — what to choose?

May 28, 2025

Depending on the chain length and origin of the fat, regular fat consumption changes the specific makeup of fats in bloodstream and affect mild to severe cholesterol patterns. Read about this recent Journal of Lipid Research study.