Curcumin Alleviates Chronic Pain and Improves Cognitive Impairment via Enhancing Hippocampal Neurogenesis in Sciatic Nerve Constriction Rats

J Pain Res. 2021 Apr 20:14:1061-1070. doi: 10.2147/JPR.S299604. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Purpose: Cognitive impairment is a complication that most frequently happens in patients with chronic neuropathic pain and has limited effective therapy. The aim of this study was to explore the effects of curcumin on the cognitive deficit in rats with peripheral nerve injury induced-neuropathic pain.

Methods: The neuropathic pain rat model was constructed using chronic constriction injury (CCI). The curcumin (60 mg/kg) or vehicle was intraperitoneally administered once a day, beginning at 14th day after surgery and continued for 14 consecutive days. The nociceptive threshold tests were measured by paw mechanical withdraw threshold (PMWT) and paw thermal withdrawal latency (PTWL), while the spatial memory abilities were evaluated by the Morris water maze test. The mean counts of bromodeoxyuridine (Brdu)/neuronal nuclei (NeuN) as well as Brdu/doublecortin (DCX) co-labeled cells were used to evaluate neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus of hippocampus. The ultrastructure of the synapse in hippocampal region was visualized using transmission electron microscopy (TEM).

Results: Increased PMWT and PTWL, as well as relieved memory deficits, were found in CCI rats under curcumin administration. Moreover, curcumin treatment increased the number of newly born immature (BrdU/NeuN) and newly generated mature neurons (BrdU/DCX). The TEM examination revealed increased PSD thickness and shorter active zone length as well as narrowed synaptic cleft width in the hippocampal region of CCI rats after curcumin injection.

Conclusion: Curcumin can alleviate CCI induced nociceptive behaviors and memory deficit. This effect might be associated with hippocampal neurogenesis and synaptic plasticity improvements, which indicated curcumin as a potential strategy for the cognitive impairment restoration under prolonged neuropathic pain condition.

Keywords: cognitive impairment; curcumin; hippocampus neurogenesis; peripheral nerve injury.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 81701104], the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (20ykpy25) and the Sun Yat-sen University Clinical Research 5010 Program (2017016).