The inability to adequately treat chronic pain is a worldwide health care crisis. Pain has both an emotional and a sensory component and this latter component, nociception, refers specifically to the detection of damaging or potentially damaging stimuli. Nociception represents a critical interaction between an animal and its environment and exhibits considerable evolutionary conservation across species. Using comparative approaches to understand the basic biology of nociception could promote the development of novel therapeutic strategies to treat pain and studies of nociception in invertebrates can provide especially useful insights towards this goal. Both vertebrates and invertebrates exhibit segregated sensory pathways for nociceptive and non-nociceptive information, injury-induced sensitization to nociceptive and non-nociceptive stimuli, and even similar anti-nociceptive modulatory processes. In a number of invertebrate species, the central nervous system (CNS) is understood in considerable detail and it is often possible to record from and/or manipulate single, identifiable neurons through either molecular genetic or physiological approaches. Invertebrates also provide an opportunity to study nociception in an ethologically-relevant context that can provide novel insights into the nature of how injury-inducing stimuli produce persistent changes in behavior. Despite these advantages, invertebrates have been under-utilized in nociception research. In this review, findings from invertebrate nociception studies are summarized and proposals for how research using invertebrates can address questions about the fundamental mechanisms of nociception are presented.
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