Project Summary
Rosacea is a common skin disorder with an unknown etiology which causes facial redness and
inflammation, substantially decreases quality of life, and can cause permanent facial disfigurement. Neuronal
dysregulation may play a role in rosacea pathogenesis, because many events that trigger rosacea symptoms
are also stressors that are known to increase sympathetic nervous system activity. Our pilot data suggest that
individuals with rosacea have increased sympathetic responses to sympathetic stressors. Thus, the proposed
project will comprehensively examine the role of sympathetic and sympathetic-like reflexes in rosacea. An
increase in sympathetic outflow to the erythema- and flushing-prone areas of the face could be the initiation of
the inflammatory etiology of the disease. This research investigates the central hypothesis that neural
changes in persons with rosacea precede and drive the inflammatory responses that characterize the
disease via three Aims. Specific Aim 1 will determine whether altered sympathetic signals in rosacea are
systemic/global vs. local/focal in nature. Specific Aim 2 will indicate which sympathetic receptor population is
involved in these rosacea-related changes. Specific Aim 3 seeks to rule out sympathetic-like axon reflex
responses, which taken together with expected findings in Aims 1 and 2 would indicate that neural changes in
rosacea are the result of the sympathetic nervous system rather than from a local reflex nerve which can mimic
the sympathetic responses. Our expertise in the gold-standard direct measurement and analysis of sympathetic
neural activity via microneurography, functional receptor identification, and the integrative analysis of cutaneous
end-organ responses in this in vivo human model uniquely positions us to investigate the Aims outlined above.
Our previous work was the first study to directly quantify sympathetic nerve activity in the facial skin of
individuals with rosacea, and we are unaware of any other active labs with the demonstrated expertise
and ability to perform these measures. Additional pilot data coupled with the available equipment, facilities,
support, and expertise demonstrate that the proposed Specific Aims are achievable and attainable. This project
will also allow us to provide undergraduate and graduate students from our institution an opportunity to be fully
exposed to and engage in biomedical research and prepare them for future biomedical scientific endeavors. The
primary rationale for this project is that these data will provide functional and mechanistic insight into facial
flushing in rosacea and have a significant impact on human wellbeing and quality of life. This research is
especially significant as a driver of an alternate paradigm for rosacea treatment, with the potential of
sympathetic interventions or sympathetic medications being used as a first line of disease-modifying therapy.