Pain
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Nerve lesions and secondary hyperalgesia may both be present after surgery, and their relative contributions to chronic postsurgical neuropathic pain (CPSNP) remain unclear. This prospective study explored the roles of these factors in the development of CPSNP after iliac crest bone harvest. CPSNP was defined as pain in the area of hypoesthesia, with a positive Douleur neuropathique 4 questionnaire (DN4) score 3 months after iliac crest bone harvest. ⋯ However, neither the area nor the severity of hypoesthesia differed significantly between patients with and without CPSNP. Two independent, additive predictors of CPSNP were identified: area of secondary hyperalgesia (odds ratio 1.02; P=.004) and DN4 score (odds ratio 1.94; P=.001). These findings suggest that both nerve lesions and central sensitization are involved in CPSNP development and could be seen as early warning signs.
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Tactile acuity measured by 2-point discrimination performance is impaired in patients with complex regional pain syndrome type I (CRPS-I). This is mirrored by pain-associated shrinkage of the cortical representation of the affected limb. We investigated whether, also, more complex tactile performance assessed by a dynamic 2D-form perception task is disturbed in CRPS-I patients. ⋯ The performance in the BT was not impaired in CRPS-I patients (compared to sex- and age-matched controls from study I) and was not correlated to the TPDT. The intact 2D-form recognition ability in CRPS-I patients might be explained by intact dynamic tactile and proprioceptive functions, which appear to be uncompromised by the impaired static tactile perception, provided that the spacing of the dot pattern is above the individual tactile acuity. These intact 2D-form perception capacities may also be related to higher sensory integration functions like the visual system and intact semantic understanding, which may be spared by the cortical reorganization phenomena in CRPS-I.
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Most people suffer musculoskeletal pain sometime in their lives. Although the pain usually disappears with the healing, it may become chronic. Recent evidence suggests that high-level cortical representations play a role in chronic pain. ⋯ However, patients with chronic shoulder pain were specifically impaired to judge the weight from observed manual transfer movements, whereas chronic low-back pain patients were specifically impaired for trunk-rotation movements. This result gives important new insights into chronic pain. Also, this new impairment of biological motion perception is unique in that it is unrelated to visual deficits.
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Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) is a prevalent chronic pain disorder that remains poorly understood. Recent imaging studies reported functional and gray matter abnormalities in brain areas implicated in sensorimotor, modulatory, and cognitive function in TMD, but it is not known whether there are white matter (WM) abnormalities along the trigeminal nerve (CNV) or in the brain. ⋯ Finally, we found that 1) FA in tracts adjacent to the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and tracts coursing through the thalamus negatively correlated with pain intensity; 2) FA in the internal capsule negatively correlated with pain intensity and unpleasantness; and 3) decreases in brain FA were associated with increases in mean diffusivity and radial diffusivity, markers of inflammation and oedema. These data provide novel evidence for CNV microstructural abnormalities that may be caused by increased nociceptive activity, accompanied by abnormalities along central WM pathways in TMD.
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Pain catastrophizing has shown to predict avoidance behavior in acute and chronic pain, but the literature is inconsistent. The present study tested the hypothesis that current mood and threat context moderate the relationship between pain catastrophizing and performance duration. Affective-motivational models postulate that negative and positive moods provide information about whether an activity is respectively threatening or safe. ⋯ The opposite was found when participants experienced positive moods. Moreover, these relationships were most pronounced in a high threatening pain context. This study suggests that the relationship between pain catastrophizing and performance duration during painful activities is moderated by situational factors such as current mood and threat context.