Pain
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The placebo effect is considered the core example of mind-body interactions. However, individual differences produce large placebo response variability in both healthy volunteers and patients. The placebo response in pain, placebo analgesia, may be dependent on both the opioid system and the dopaminergic system. ⋯ Participants with OPRM1 Asn/Asn combined with COMT Met/Met and Val/Met reported significant pain relief after placebo administration, whereas those with other combinations of the OPRM1 and COMT genotypes displayed no significant placebo effect. Neither OPRM1 nor COMT had any significant influence on affective changes after placebo administration. As shown in this study, genotyping with regard to OPRM1 and COMT may predict who will respond favorably to placebo analgesic treatment.
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Chronic widespread musculoskeletal pain (CWP) and frailty are prevalent conditions in older people. We have shown previously that interindividual variation in frailty and CWP is genetically determined. We also reported an association of frailty and CWP caused by shared genetic and common environmental factors. ⋯ Epiandrosterone sulphate, previously shown to be highly inversely associated with CWP, was found to exert an indirect influence on FI. Bioinformatics analysis of genome-wide association study and EWAS showed that FI and its covariation with CWP was through genomic regions involved in neurological pathways. Neurological pathway involvement accounts for the associated conditions of aging CWP and FI.
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Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and temporal summation of pain (TSP) are 2 experimental paradigms capturing endogenous pain modulation, which have repeatedly demonstrated clinical relevance. Conditioned pain modulation describes the inhibition of the pain response to a test stimulus (Ts) when a second noxious stimulus, the conditioning stimulus (CS), is concurrently applied. Temporal summation of pain describes the enhanced pain response to a series of stimuli compared with single stimuli. ⋯ Interestingly, this interaction was modality-dependent: TSP for heat Ts was completely abolished by CPM, whereas this was not the case for pressure Ts. Our findings suggest different forms of central sensitization induced by TSP using either heat or pressure stimuli, which differ in their susceptibility to CPM. Clinical implications and directions for future research are discussed.
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Impaired corticomotor function is reported in patients with lateral epicondylalgia, but the causal link to pain or musculotendinous overloading is unclear. In this study, sensorimotor cortical changes were investigated using a model of persistent pain combined with an overloading condition. In 24 healthy subjects, the effect of nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced pain, combined with delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS), was examined on pain perception, pressure pain sensitivity, maximal force, and sensorimotor cortical excitability. ⋯ At day 6, compared with day 4, only the DOMS + NGF group showed: (1) increased muscle soreness score (P < 0.01); (2) decreased grip force (P < 0.01); and (3) decreased motor map volume (P < 0.05). The NGF group did not show any difference on the remaining outcomes from day 4 to day 6. These data suggest that sustained muscle pain modulates sensorimotor cortical excitability and that exercise-induced DOMS alters pain-related corticomotor adaptation.