Articles: pain-measurement.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The effect of the sight of blood and use of decorative adhesive bandages on pain intensity ratings by preschool children.
A total of 70 children between the ages of 3 and 6 years participated in two studies that tested the effect of (a) the sight of blood and (b) the application of a decorated adhesive bandage on pain intensity ratings following a fingerstick. In both studies, children were randomly assigned to one of four groups. These groups allowed for the combinations of testing blood or no blood and the application of a decorated adhesive bandage or plain adhesive bandage. ⋯ Fifty outpatient children who were receiving fingersticks for preoperative or diagnostic testing were enrolled. Results indicated that there were no differences across groups, and age was only significant on the Poker Chip Tool. These results suggest that simple interventions and distractions are not sufficient to decrease perceived pain intensity ratings in young children.
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Exposure to an innocuous stimulus that has been paired with footshock during Pavlovian conditioning results in the activation of descending antinociceptive systems in the rat. Several recent studies indicate that the hypoalgesia observed when contextual stimuli are paired with shock and the formalin test is used to measure antinociception depends on the integrity of a neural circuit which includes the amygdala and the periaqueductal gray. The present experiment was designed to determine if the amygdala is also critical for hypoalgesia in response to a discrete auditory signal for footshock when hypoalgesia is measured with the radiant heat tail flick test. ⋯ After training, one half of the animals received large electrolytic lesions of the amygdala. Lesions of the amygdala blocked the time dependent elevation in tail flick latency following tone presentation in animals given paired training, but did not alter baseline tail flick responding. These data indicate that the amygdala is also essential for fear-related modulation of spinally mediated nociceptive reflexes, and provide further support for our current model in which amygdalo-mesencephalic projections are critical for the expression of certain forms of stress-induced hypoalgesia.
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Deep pressure pain threshold (PPT) and pressure pain tolerance (PPtol) were measured by pressure algometry at the mastoid processes, external malleoli, and sternum in 24 healthy volunteers. The algometer consisted of a force displacement transducer with a 0.25 cm2 pressure tip linked to a recorder. The rate of force application was approximately 1kg/sec/0.25cm2. ⋯ On repeat examination, comparison between the mean values at each site showed no statistical differences in any instance. Pressure algometry, as used in this study in healthy subjects, proved a reliable technique for the estimation of deep PPT and PPtol values. It may possibly serve for screening the response to experimental pain in various groups of pain patients.
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A short form of the McGill Pain Questionnaire (SF-MPQ) was previously developed. It was found to correlate highly with and demonstrate differences due to treatment in a manner similar to the long form of the McGill Pain Questionnaire (LF-MPQ). The LF-MPQ was previously found to be a valid measurement of pain in the cancer population. ⋯ Both the long and short total scores correlated highly with the visual analogue scale (VAS) and present pain intensity (PPI) scale. The SF-MPQ demonstrated changes over time in a manner similar to the LF-MPQ in this patient group. These observations support the value of the SF-MPQ as a tool for studying interventions in patients with chronic pain due to cancer.
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Pain ratings and pain-related cerebral potentials in response to noxious stimuli were investigated under hypnotic hypo- or hyperalgesia. Out of a sample of 50 subjects the 10 most highly hypnotizable were selected using the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale. Phasic pain was induced by brief electrical stimuli intracutaneously applied to the subject's left middle finger. ⋯ In contrast, the amplitudes of the late somatosensory potentials evoked by the pain-inducing stimuli were not modified in either of the suggestive states. Furthermore, no effects of hypnosis were found on AEPs and on the power spectra of the spontaneous EEG. The results are discussed on the basis of a dissociation of sensory and affective components of pain under hypnosis.