Pain
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Disturbed sensory perception of changes in thermoalgesic stimuli in patients with small fiber neuropathies.
The assessment of functional deficits in small fibre neuropathies (SFN) requires using ancillary tests other than conventional neurophysiological techniques. One of the tests with most widespread use is thermal threshold determination, as part of quantitative sensory testing. Thermal thresholds typically reflect one point in the whole subjective experience elicited by a thermal stimulus. ⋯ Abnormalities seen in patients in comparison to healthy subjects were: (1) delayed perception of temperature changes, both at onset and at reversal, (2) longer duration of pain perception at peak temperature, and (3) absence of an overshoot sensation after reversal, ie, a transient perception of the opposite sensation before the temperature reached again baseline. The use of DTT increases the yield of thermal testing for clinical and physiological studies. It adds information that can be discriminant between healthy subjects and SFN patients and shows physiological details about the process of activation and inactivation of temperature receptors that may be abnormal in SFN.
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Greater responsiveness of emotional arousal circuits in relation to delivered visceral pain has been implicated as underlying central pain amplification in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), with female subjects showing greater responses than male subjects. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure neural responses to an emotion recognition paradigm, using faces expressing negative emotions (fear and anger). Sex and disease differences in the connectivity of affective and modulatory cortical circuits were studied in 47 IBS (27 premenopausal female subjects) and 67 healthy control subjects (HCs; 38 premenopausal female subjects). ⋯ Effective connectivity analyses identified major sex- and disease-related differences in the functioning of brain networks related to prefrontal regions, cingulate, insula, and amygdala. Male subjects had stronger connectivity between anterior cingulate subregions, amygdala, and insula, whereas female subjects had stronger connectivity to and from the prefrontal modulatory regions (medial/dorsolateral cortex). Male IBS subjects demonstrate greater engagement of cortical and affect-related brain circuitry compared to male control subjects and female subjects, when viewing faces depicting emotions previously shown to elicit greater behavioral and brain responses in male subjects.
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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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Randomized Controlled Trial
Eugenol and carvacrol induce temporally desensitizing patterns of oral irritation and enhance innocuous warmth and noxious heat sensation on the tongue.
Eugenol and carvacrol, from the spices clove and oregano, respectively, are agonists of TRPV3, which is implicated in transduction of warmth and possibly heat pain. We investigated the temporal dynamics of lingual irritation elicited by these agents, and their effects on innocuous warmth and heat pain, using a half-tongue method in human subjects. The irritant sensation elicited by both eugenol and carvacrol decreased across repeated applications at a 1-minute interstimulus interval (self-desensitization) which persisted for at least 10 minutes. ⋯ Eugenol, but not carvacrol, reduced detection of low-threshold mechanical stimuli. Eugenol and carvacrol enhancement of innocuous warmth may involve sensitization of thermal gating of TRPV3 expressed in peripheral warm fibers. The brief heat hyperalgesia following eugenol may involve a TRPV3-mediated enhancement of thermal gating of TRPV1 expressed in lingual polymodal nociceptors.
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We previously discovered that when faced with a challenging cognitive task in the context of pain, some people prioritize task performance, while in others, pain results in poorer performance. These behaviours, designated respectively as A- and P-types (for attention dominates vs pain dominates), may reflect pain coping strategies, resilience or vulnerabilities to develop chronic pain, or predict the efficacy of treatments such as cognitive behavioural therapy. Here, we used a cognitive interference task and pain stimulation in 80 subjects to interrogate psychophysical, psychological, brain structure and function that distinguish these behavioural strategies. ⋯ Brain imaging revealed structural and functional brain features that characterized these behavioural strategies. Compared to the performance-oriented A group, the P group had (1) more gray matter in regions implicated in pain and salience (anterior insula, anterior midcingulate cortex, supplementary motor area, orbitofrontal cortex, thalamus, caudate), (2) greater functional connectivity in sensorimotor and salience resting-state networks, (3) less white matter integrity in the internal and external capsule, anterior thalamic radiation and corticospinal tract, but (4) were indistinguishable based on sex, pain sensitivity, neuroticism, and pain catastrophizing. These data may represent neural underpinnings of how task performance vs pain is prioritized and provide a framework for developing personalized pain therapy approaches that are based on behaviour-structure-function organization.