Illustration of male and female lab mice exhibiting sex-specific immune responses to nerve injuries, with visualized inflammation and serum transfer causing pain in healthy mice.
Illustration of male and female lab mice exhibiting sex-specific immune responses to nerve injuries, with visualized inflammation and serum transfer causing pain in healthy mice.
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Nerve injuries trigger sex-specific immune changes throughout the body

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Preclinical research from McGill University indicates that peripheral nerve injuries can cause long-term changes in the immune system across the body, with distinct patterns in male and female mice. Male mice showed strong and persistent inflammatory responses in the blood, while females did not show the same increase, yet serum from both sexes transmitted pain hypersensitivity when transferred to healthy mice. The findings point to previously unrecognized pathways involved in chronic pain and may open the door to more personalized treatments.

Nerve injuries, which can occur from stretching, pressure, or cuts, are common and often lead to chronic pain and other persistent complications. New preclinical work from McGill University suggests that such injuries do not just affect the damaged nerve but can also reshape immune activity throughout the entire body.

According to a report from McGill University published in Neurobiology of Pain, laboratory analysis of blood from mice showed clear signs of bodywide inflammatory changes after a peripheral nerve injury. Researchers used a spared nerve injury model in male and female mice and followed them for up to 20 months, repeatedly assessing pain sensitivity and immune-related factors in the blood.

The study found that, compared to sham surgery, male mice developed elevated levels of many inflammation-related proteins in their serum that remained dysregulated over time. In contrast, female mice showed a much more limited response, with far fewer inflammatory proteins consistently increased. Despite these differences, serum taken from both nerve-injured males and females induced heightened mechanical and cold pain sensitivity when transferred into otherwise healthy mice, regardless of whether the donor and recipient were the same sex.

"That means whatever is causing pain in females is working through a completely different biological pathway that we don't yet understand," said co-author Jeffrey Mogil, E.P. Taylor Professor of Pain Studies at McGill and a Distinguished James McGill Professor, in the McGill release.

The results suggest that factors circulating in the blood—differing between males and females—can propagate pain responses systemically. The authors note that injury-associated systemic inflammation may contribute to neuropathic pain, and that the underlying mechanisms appear to be sexually dimorphic.

"By understanding how men and women react differently to nerve injuries, we can work toward more personalized and effective treatments for chronic pain," said Sam Zhou, the study's lead author and a PhD student at McGill.

Beyond pain, the McGill team reports that long-lasting disruptions to immune function after nerve injury could potentially influence broader health risks. Their paper notes that persistent systemic inflammation following nerve damage might help explain links between chronic pain and conditions such as anxiety and depression, though this connection remains an area for further research rather than a proven causal pathway.

"Recognizing the full impact of nerve injuries is important for both doctors and patients," said senior author Dr. Ji Zhang, a professor in McGill's Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery and in the Faculty of Dental Medicine and Oral Health Sciences. "A localized nerve injury can affect whole body. Men and women may respond differently."

The study, titled "The impact of nerve injury on the immune system across the lifespan is sexually dimorphic," was published in Neurobiology of Pain (Volume 18, 2025). The research was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Louise and Alan Edwards Foundation.

ሰዎች ምን እያሉ ነው

Initial reactions on X to the McGill University study are limited and neutral, primarily sharing summaries of the findings that peripheral nerve injuries induce sex-specific systemic immune changes in mice, with males showing persistent inflammation and both sexes transmitting pain hypersensitivity via serum, potentially paving the way for personalized chronic pain therapies.

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Illustration of mitochondria transferring from glia to neurons to reduce nerve pain in neuropathy models.
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Duke-led Nature study links glia-to-neuron mitochondria transfer to reduced nerve pain in neuropathy models

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Duke University researchers report that boosting the transfer of healthy mitochondria from support cells to sensory neurons reduced pain-like behaviors in mouse models of diabetic and chemotherapy-related peripheral neuropathy, an approach they say could address a root driver of nerve pain rather than simply blocking pain signals.

Researchers in Germany have developed an AI-based imaging and analysis system that can map nerves, immune cells, and dozens of organs across intact, transparent mice. In experiments on diet-induced obesity, the tool flagged structural damage in branches of the trigeminal (facial sensory) nerve alongside broad immune-cell changes, and the team reported related molecular signatures in human trigeminal tissue from people with obesity.

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Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder have pinpointed a brain region called the caudal granular insular cortex, or CGIC, that acts as a switch turning acute pain into chronic pain. In animal studies, disabling this circuit prevented chronic pain from developing or reversed it once established. The findings, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, open paths to new treatments beyond opioids.

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