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"Scientists finally find where to scratch"- Discovery of the histamine itch pathway, as reported in the Oct. 18, 1997, Science News.
Garden-variety itches related to histamine, like the kind
caused by an angry rash of chicken pox or poison ivy, annoy everyone, but most
can be subdued with drugs like Benadryl. But another type of itch is not
mollified by these drugs, and therein lies the rub. Pathological itch — called
the “itch that laughs at Benadryl” by neuroscientist and itch investigator
Glenn Giesler Jr. of the
Not often pursued by scientists who look at sensation, itch
research has lagged far behind investigations of other bodily cues. But in
recent years, scientists have begun studying pathological itch seriously. This
year researchers found nerve fibers—long, thin strands that carry information
from the outer skin to the spinal cord and ultimately, the brain—built to
detect this often-devastating type of itch. The new results show that it has its
own pathway to the brain.
“That’s the hottest topic in the field right now, the idea
of different pathways for different itches,” says Earl Carstens, a
neurobiologist at the
“In the last two years, there has been an exponential growth
of publications in the field, with major findings,” says Gil Yosipovitch, a
researcher and clinician at
Increasing attention to itch is good news for the estimated
17 million Americans with severe, chronic itch from atopic eczema, a skin
disease marked by dry, itchy skin, and other itchy conditions. A large study on
itch conducted in
It’s easy to imagine why. Think of spiny insect legs
scurrying up the neck, and of lice, mosquitoes, bedbugs and chiggers crawling
on, burrowing in and biting tender parts of the skin. Now magnify those
sensations by months, years or even decades.
For patients and doctors, the worst part of this itch is that there is almost no way to treat it. Antihistamines like Benadryl, the tried-and-true way of blocking itch caused by bug bites and hives, have no effect on more serious itch conditions. In many cases, the best (and only) advice has remained unchanged for many years: Moisturize, wear loose clothing and, whatever you do, don’t scratch.
“It’s maddening,” says Susan Lipworth, a board member of the
National Eczema Association, based in
The original itching
Plants and bugs can make us itch. So can scratchy wool
sweaters. It turns out that itch can even be brought on by the power of
suggestion.
You feel an itch on the skin. But its roots lie deep in the brain and spinal cord, a finding that emerged from scientists’ first modern attempts to understand itch in the 1970s and 1980s. Studying the itches brought on by things like poison ivy, scientists showed that after contact with the plant’s toxins, the skin releases a chemical called histamine from specialized cells that cause the skin to swell, redden and itch.
Early work by European researchers showed that histamine
causes intense itch when injected directly into human skin. It wasn’t until
1997 that a German research group led by Martin Schmelz, now at the
“The idea was fabulous,” says Robert LaMotte, a
neurobiologist at
Until the 1997 finding, most researchers thought that itch was a weaker form of pain, and probably sensed by pain-related nerves. Scientists believed that if an itchy stimulus was increased to a high enough level, the itch would turn into an “ouch.” Conversely, if a painful poke was lessened enough, the pain would feel itchy. But the discovery of fibers that responded to histamine but not to a painful pinch revealed itch as a sensation unto itself.
“The idea that histamine is the main itch mediator in the
skin was prevalent for a long time,” Carstens says.
The study of histamine itch led to major gains in understanding a chemical that causes itch and the fibers that detect it, but in a sense, it was a red herring. Even then scientists knew that some itching didn’t appear to involve histamine.
Laughing at Benadryl
“It all started with the observations of itch that are
resistant to antihistamines. That’s why we embarked on this research,” says
Matthias Ringkamp, a neurobiologist at
Another clue also led scientists to look for separate
pathways for these types of itch: The nerve endings discovered by Schmelz’s
group in 1997 cannot detect many types of itch, like the kind caused by unlined
prickly wool pants raking against dry winter legs. Researchers thought it might
be possible to use temporary nonhistamine itches as experimental proxies for chronic,
debilitating itches.
To study the itches in the lab, scientists turned to cowhage, a major ingredient in pranksters’ itching powder. Back in the 1950s, scientists had described the curiously itchy effects of cowhage, or Mucuna pruriens, a tropical plant with white or purple flowers that produces nutritious beans. Its seedpods are coated with tiny lances called spicules. When lodged in the skin, the spicules produce an intense, pure and reproducible itch that lasts for about six minutes. (Probably a very long six minutes for the study participants.)
“You can take Benadryl all day, and if you jump into a
cowhage plant, you’ll itch like no tomorrow,” says Giesler, whose
To draw distinctions between itches, a team of researchers led by Ringkamp conducted experiments using histamine for the usual itch and using cowhage to represent chronic itch. Although the study subjects found both substances to be itchy, the characteristics of the itches were markedly distinct. The itchy area caused by cowhage was restricted to the site of application; the histamine itch spread out from the original site. When an antihistamine was applied to the itches, the cowhage itch persisted.
But when Ringkamp and colleagues treated the itches with the
compound that makes chili peppers hot —capsaicin, which triggers a pain
response — they blocked the cowhage itch, while leaving the histamine itch
unaffected. There was another notable difference. The cowhage itch disappeared
in about six minutes, while the histamine itch lasted longer.
These results, published in 2007 in the Journal of Neuroscience, showed that while the sensation of the two itches caused by histamine and cowhage felt similar to participants, the mechanisms were undoubtedly different.
Since, like almost all types of chronic, pathological
itches, the itch produced by cowhage is impervious to antihistamines,
scientists reasoned that if they could figure out exactly which neural fibers
were responsible for a cowhage itch, they might understand how pathological
itch works. Then, they could figure out how to treat it. The scientists
concluded that different itch fibers may carry distinct itch messages to the
brain.
Because the histamine-sensing itch fibers could not detect itchy mechanical stimuli, like a scratchy wool sweater, the researchers turned to another likely culprit: pain fibers.
Pain and the itch
Called an “exquisite pleasure” by researcher G.H. Bishop in
1948, scratching an itch is deeply satisfying, probably because the pain caused
by scratching overrides itch fiber activity. But the relationship between pain
and itch is, to put it mildly, complicated.
After the 1997 discovery of the itch-specific fibers, itch and pain were uncoupled. The new data on cowhage-induced itch suggests that pain and itch, in some cases, do seem to be linked, and perhaps detected by the very same fibers. The finding makes the idea of a clean separation a bit fuzzier.
To see the activity of individual fibers that might respond
to pain and itch, LaMotte’s team began eavesdropping on the neurons of monkeys.
The researchers wanted to know if a type of nerve fiber that detects pain
caused by heat and mechanical forces, such as a pinch, could also sense a
cowhage-induced itch.
To test this idea, thin, conductive wires were inserted into the skin of a sedated monkey, and different types of stimuli were applied to the arm: Heat and capsaicin to cause pain, and cowhage and histamine to bring on the itch.
The team tapped into individual nerve endings as they responded to pain. A few showed a weak response when histamine was applied. But the majority of the nerve fibers responded strongly to cowhage. The same fibers known to detect painful stimuli like a hard poke or a burn could also detect the cowhage itch. These fibers were pulling double duty.
Vocabulary for itch fibers is lacking, so Ringkamp’s group
described these new itch fibers, in the July 23 Journal of Neuroscience,
by their pain fiber names.
Cowhage itch has a private pathway to the brain, independent of the histamine-related pathway, and scientists assume chronic itch conditions do too, Carstens says. “The idea is that there are now at least two separate mechanisms and pathways for itch, one for histamine and another one for cowhage,” he says.
Ringkamp explains: “These two kinds of itch induce two
different types of neuronal populations.”
And then there’s the contagious itch, similar to the yawn that can overtake a room. In a 2000 study titled “Observations during an Itch-Inducing Lecture,” viewing slide shows starring fleas, mites and allergic rashes led people to scratch themselves.
Even reading about itches may be enough to cause the
sensation. (Sorry for the scratch marks.)
Understanding the architecture of the types of nerve fibers that detect itch and the complicated brain processing that makes a person want to scratch, scientists say, will lead to a greater understanding of how bodies perceive these sensations. As LaMotte, the neurobiologist from Yale, puts it, “This is a window into how the brain processes stimuli.”
Despite all this progress, most researchers in the field agree that the task of classifying and describing all of the different sensory fibers in skin is in its infancy. Scientists, they say, have just scratched the surface.
Found in: Biology, Biomedicine, Body & Brain, Humans and Psychology
- Johanek, L.M. . . . and Matthias Ringkamp. 2008. A Role for polymodal C-fiber afferents in
nonhistaminergic itch. Journal of Neuroscience 28(July 23):7659–7669. - Johanek, L.M. . . . and Matthias Ringkamp. 2007. Psychophysical and physiological evidence for parallel afferent pathways mediating the sensation of itch. Journal of Neuroscience 27(July 11):7490 –7497.
- Schmelz, M., et al. 1997. Specific C-receptors for itch in human skin. Journal of Neuroscience 17(Oct. 15):8003–8008.

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