Pain
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Vision is important for avoiding encounters with objects in the environment that may imperil physical integrity. We tested whether, in the absence of vision, a lower pain threshold would arise from an adaptive shift to other sensory channels. We therefore measured heat and cold pain thresholds and responses to suprathreshold heat stimuli in 2 groups of congenitally blind and matched normal-sighted participants. ⋯ Thresholds for nonpainful thermal stimulation did not differ between groups. The results of the pain questionnaires further indicated that blind subjects are more attentive to signals of external threats. These findings indicate that the absence of vision from birth induces a hypersensitivity to painful stimuli, lending new support to a model of sensory integration of vision and pain processing.
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Observational Study
Natural history of herpes zoster: late follow-up of 3.9 years (n=43) and 7.7 years (n=10).
Postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) is a common complication after herpes zoster (HZ). Subjects who completed a longitudinal observational 6-month study (4 visits) of the natural history of HZ were recontacted for 2 additional follow-up visits that included pain and sensory symptom assessment, quantitative sensory testing, capsaicin response test, and 3-mm punch skin biopsies in HZ-affected, mirror-image, and control skin sites. Forty-three subjects (14 with PHN at 6 months) of the original 94 subjects in the cohort were comprehensively assessed at a median 3.9 years after HZ onset (visit 5), and 10 subjects underwent a final assessment at a median 7.7 years after HZ onset (visit 6). ⋯ One subject with PHN at 6 months was free of symptoms at 3.9 years but had very mild pain at 7.7 years. Sensory function continued on a path toward normalization, but was still abnormal in many subjects, especially those who met criteria for PHN at 6 months. Even at 7.7 years, reinnervation of HZ-affected skin was not apparent.
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Little is known about the central mechanisms underlying the transition from local or regional to widespread pain in low back pain patients. The aim of the study was to find out if muscle input induced by injection of nerve growth factor (NGF) can be used as an animal model for studying spinal mechanisms involved in widespread myofascial low back pain. Electrophysiological recordings from rat dorsal horn neurons were made in vivo to study alterations in their responsiveness caused by 2 injections of NGF into the multifidus muscle at an interval of 5 days. ⋯ Important findings were that the proportion of neurons having multiple receptive fields (RFs) in various tissues was significantly higher after 2 NGF injections, and new RFs appeared on the distal hind limb. The new RFs were located not in the skin but in deep tissues (muscles, thoracolumbar fascia). If similar changes occur in patients, the data might explain the diffuse nature and spread of myofascial low back pain.
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Recovery following a whiplash injury is varied: approximately 50% of individuals fully recover, 25% develop persistent moderate/severe pain and disability, and 25% experience milder levels of disability. Identification of individuals likely to develop moderate/severe disability or to fully recover may help direct therapeutic resources and optimise treatment. A clinical prediction rule (CPR) is a research-generated tool used to predict outcomes such as likelihood of developing moderate/severe disability or experiencing full recovery from whiplash injury. ⋯ The probability of full recovery was increased in younger individuals with initially lower levels of neck disability (PPV=71%). This study provides initial evidence for a CPR to predict both chronic moderate/severe disability and full recovery following a whiplash injury. Further research is needed to validate the tool, determine the acceptability of the proposed CPR by practitioners, and assess the impact of inclusion in practice.