Pain
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The impact of patient expectations on outcomes in four randomized controlled trials of acupuncture in patients with chronic pain.
In a pooled analysis of four randomized controlled trials of acupuncture in patients with migraine, tension-type headache, chronic low back pain, and osteoarthritis of the knee we investigated the influence of expectations on clinical outcome. The 864 patients included in the analysis received either 12 sessions of acupuncture or minimal (i.e. sham) acupuncture (superficial needling of non-acupuncture points) over an 8 week period. Patients were asked at baseline whether they considered acupuncture to be an effective therapy in general and what they personally expected from the treatment. ⋯ For personal expectations and confidence after the third session, odds ratios were 2.03 (1.26-3.26) and 2.35 (1.68-3.30), respectively. Results from the 6-month follow-up were similar. In conclusion, in our trials a significant association was shown between better improvement and higher outcome expectations.
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Comparative Study
Defining the nociceptive flexion reflex (NFR) threshold in human participants: a comparison of different scoring criteria.
Despite the widespread use of the nociceptive flexion reflex (NFR) paradigm in clinical and experimental pain research, there is currently no consensus on how best to define NFR threshold. Accordingly, the present studies were designed to assess the accuracy and reliability of different NFR threshold scoring criteria. Study 1 compared 13 scoring criteria in their accuracy for identifying the presence of the NFR, then generated empirically derived cut-points for the best criteria, and examined the test-retest reliability of NFR thresholds derived from these cut-points. ⋯ Results from the two studies suggested that standardized peak (NFR Interval Peak z score) and mean (NFR Interval z score) biceps femoris electromyogram (EMG) activity were accurate and reliable criteria for defining NFR threshold. Acknowledging that cut-points may need to be adjusted for different research designs, graphs depicting sensitivity and specificity across a range of cut-points have been provided to facilitate researcher's decision-making. It is hoped that the results of these studies will promote a standard NFR threshold assessment methodology, and further encourage the application of the NFR paradigm in the investigation of mechanisms and characteristics of both painful and non-painful diseases.
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Substance P (SP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) may have roles in trigeminovascular nociceptive mechanisms. We investigated interictal levels of SP, CGRP, ACE activity, and their correlation, in a sample of migraineurs. Forty-one patients suffering from migraine with aura (MA), 54 without aura (MO), and 52 non-headache subjects (controls) participated in this study. ⋯ There was a weak, but significant positive correlation between SP levels and ACE activities (P<0.01). However, a relationship between ACE activities and CGRP levels was not observed. The data suggest that SP, CGRP, and ACE are relevant to migraine pathophysiology, and that they may interact.
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The impact of long-term potentiation (LTP) in nociceptive pathways on somatosensory perception was examined by means of quantitative sensory testing (QST) in the ventral forearm of 12 healthy human subjects. Electrical high-frequency stimulation of the forearm skin (HFS; 5 x 1 s at 100 Hz and 10 x detection threshold) led to an abrupt increase of pain to single electrical test stimuli, which were applied through the same electrode (perceptual LTP +72%, p<0.01). Perceptual LTP outlasted the 1-h observation period. ⋯ Furthermore, a small but significant decrease of threshold to blunt pressure stimuli (p<0.05) was found. In contrast, all thermal modalities comprising cold and warm detection thresholds, cold and heat pain thresholds as well as pain summation (perceptual wind up) remained unaltered. These data show that HFS of peptidergic cutaneous C-fiber afferents predominantly modulates Adelta- and Abeta-fiber mediated somatosensory functions, suggesting that LTP in nociceptive pathways enhances human pain sensitivity via interaction of two afferent pathways (extrinsic sensitization).
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Dichotomizing afferents are individual dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons that innervate two distinct structures thereby providing a form of afferent convergence that may be involved in pelvic organ cross-sensitization. To determine the distribution of dichotomizing afferents supplying the distal colon and bladder of the Sprague-Dawley rat and the C57Bl/6 mouse, we performed concurrent retrograde labeling of urinary bladder and distal colon afferents using cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) fluorescent conjugates. Animals were perfused 4-5 days after sub-serosal organ injections, and the T10-S2 DRG were removed, sectioned, and analyzed using confocal microscopy. ⋯ In the rat, 17% of the total CTB-positive neurons were retrogradely labeled from both organs with 11% localized in TL, 6% in LS, and 0.8% in thoracic (TH) ganglia. In the mouse, 21% of the total CTB-positive neurons were dually-labeled with 12% localized in LS, 4% in TH, and 4% in TL ganglia. These findings support the existence of dichotomizing pelvic afferents, which provide a pre-existing neuronal substrate for possible immediate and maintained pelvic organ cross-sensitization and ultimately may play a role in the overlap of pelvic pain disorders.