Pain
-
Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Social context and acceptance of chronic pain: the role of solicitous and punishing responses.
Much of the behavior of chronic pain sufferers happens in social contexts where social influences can play a role in their suffering and disability. Researchers have investigated relations of social responses with verbal and overt pain behavior and, more recently, with patient thinking, such as catastrophizing. There has not yet been a study of social influences on patient acceptance of chronic pain. ⋯ Primary results showed that, as predicted, both solicitous and punishing responses from significant others were negatively associated with acceptance of pain. These relations remained, independent of patient age, education, pain level, and level of general support from the significant other. These results suggest that social influences can play a role in patients' engagement in activity with pain present and their willingness to have pain without trying to avoid or control it.
-
Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Gender differences in pain modulation evoked by repeated injections of glutamate into the human trapezius muscle.
Gender differences in pain habituation, temporal summation, and pressure hyperalgesia evoked by repeated injections of glutamate into the dominant trapezius muscle were investigated. The glutamate-evoked muscle pain intensity and pressure pain threshold (PPT) were assessed. The PPTs were measured bilaterally in the trapezius muscles (local pain area) and posterolateral neck muscles (referred pain area) after glutamate injection in healthy and age-matched males and females (each n=14). ⋯ No PPTs changes were observed either in the contralateral trapezius muscle or bilaterally in the referred pain areas in either sex. These results suggest that a less efficient pain habituation and a greater susceptibility to the development of temporal summation of muscle pain in females, but not in males, might be one of the contributing factors to the higher incidence of neck shoulder pain in females. In addition, the reduction of PPTs in the local pain area evoked by intramuscular glutamate injection may represent an early process of peripheral pressure hyperalgesia, which is most likely gender independent.
-
Comparative Study
Acute and persistent pain modulation of attention-related anterior cingulate fMRI activations.
The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) has been implicated in both sustained attention (SA) and pain perception. Nonetheless, only a small body of literature has examined the relationship between SA and pain perception. This study utilized fMRI to examine activation patterns that emerged in the ACC in healthy participants and participants with chronic pain (due to osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee) while completing a sustained attention task with and without exposure to an acute painful stimulus. ⋯ In the healthy group, there were broadly distributed clusters of voxels within the ACC that were modulated by painful stimulation. But in the chronic pain group, a discrete focal region of the ACC was modulated by pain. These results demonstrate that ACC activity is modulated differently during tasks of SA and pain, and that acute pain in healthy participants and participants with chronic pain result in significantly different ACC activation patterns.
-
The respective roles of the ventral posterior complex (VP) and of the more recently described VMpo (posterior part of the ventral medial nucleus) as thalamic relays for pain and temperature pathways have recently been the subject of controversy. Data we obtained in one patient after a limited left thalamic infarct bring some new insights into this debate. This patient presented sudden right-sided hypesthesia for both lemniscal (touch, vibration, joint position) and spinothalamic (pain and temperature) modalities. ⋯ Neurophysiological studies showed a marked reduction (67%) of cortical responses depending on dorsal column-lemniscal transmission, while spinothalamic-specific, CO2-laser induced cortical responses were only moderately attenuated (33%). Our results show that the VP is definitely involved in thermo-algesic transmission in man, and that its selective lesion can lead to central pain. However, results also suggest that much of the spino-thalamo-cortical volley elicited by painful heat stimuli does not transit through VP, supporting the hypothesis that a non-VP locus lying more posteriorly in the human thalamus is important for thermo-algesic transmission.
-
Comparative Study
Differential susceptibility of the PAG and RVM to tolerance to the antinociceptive effect of morphine in the rat.
The periaqueductal gray (PAG) and rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) are part of a nociceptive modulatory system. Microinjection of morphine into either structure produces antinociception. Tolerance develops to ventrolateral PAG mediated antinociception with repeated microinjection of morphine. ⋯ There was a 64% drop in hot plate latency from the first to the fifth injection of morphine into the PAG, but only a 36% drop in latency following RVM microinjections. Reducing the interdose interval to two injections a day or increasing the total number of injections from 4 to 8 did not enhance the development of tolerance to RVM morphine administration. These data demonstrate that opioid-sensitive neurons in the RVM are relatively resistant to the development of tolerance compared to PAG neurons.