The journal of pain : official journal of the American Pain Society
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Tramadol effects on brain activity during cognitive and emotional empathy for pain: a randomized controlled study.
Pain is perceived not only by personal experience but also vicariously. Pain empathy is the ability to share and understand other's intentions and emotions in their painful conditions, which can be divided into cognitive and emotional empathy. It remains unclear how centrally acting analgesics would modulate brain activity related to pain empathy and which component of pain empathy would be altered by analgesics. ⋯ Supramarginal gyrus activation correlated negatively with the thermal pain threshold. In experiment 2, we found that tramadol decreased activation in angular gyrus in cognitive empathy for pain compared with placebo but did not change brain activity in emotional empathy for pain. PERSPECTIVE: Centrally acting analgesics such as tramadol may have not only analgesic effects on self-experienced pain but also on the complex neural processing of pain empathy.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Studying the effect of expectations on high-frequency electrical stimulation-induced pain and pinprick hypersensitivity.
Negative expectations can increase pain, but can they promote the development of central sensitization? This study used an inert treatment and verbal suggestions to induce expectations of increased high-frequency electrical stimulation (HFS)-induced pain and assessed their effects on pain ratings during HFS and HFS-induced pinprick hypersensitivity. Fifty healthy volunteers were randomly allocated to either a control group (N = 25) or a nocebo group (N = 25). Participants in both groups received a patch containing water on the right forearm. ⋯ HFS increased pinprick sensitivity but no group differences were found. Because of the lack of differences in expected pain and pain intensity ratings for HFS between groups, no firm conclusions can be drawn regarding their effect on pinprick hypersensitivity. PERSPECTIVE: This study shows that sham treatment combined with verbal suggestions induces a nocebo effect but does not necessarily change expectations and experience of upcoming pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Comparable conditioned pain modulation and painful-exercise-induced hypoalgesia in healthy young adults: A randomised crossover trial.
Conditioned pain modulation and exercise-induced hypoalgesia reflect inhibitory pain controls emanating from the brain. The aim of this study was to compare the extent of pain inhibition from exercise-induced hypoalgesia (isometric wall squat), conditioned pain modulation (cold-water immersion), and their combination (wall squat followed by cold water in fixed order) in healthy pain-free adults. Sixty-one participants (median age 21 years) completed 3 sessions (wall-squat, cold-water, and combined) in random order. ⋯ Pressure pain in body regions remote from the exercised or conditioned sites may be weakly modulated. PERSPECTIVE: The current findings suggest that pain-inhibitory effects induced by painful wall squat and by cold-water immersion may overlap. The magnitude of pain inhibition in the forehead remote from the exercised thigh or the conditioned foot appears smaller, which could be examined further in future research.