P059 Repeatability of cold pain and heat pain thresholds in healthy subjects

2008 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. S86-S87
Author(s):  
Trond Sand ◽  
Nikita Zhitniy ◽  
Kristian Nilsen ◽  
Knut Hagen ◽  
Lars Stovner
Cephalalgia ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 904-909 ◽  
Author(s):  
Trond Sand ◽  
Kristian Bernhard Nilsen ◽  
Knut Hagen ◽  
Lars Jacob Stovner

Normal heat pain threshold (HPT) and cold pain threshold (CPT) repeatability should be estimated in order to identify thermal allodynia in longitudinal studies, but such data are scarce in the literature. The aim of our study was to estimate normal HPT and CPT repeatability in the face, forehead, neck and hand. In addition, we reviewed briefly normative studies of thermal pain thresholds relevant for headache research. Thermal pain thresholds were measured on three different days in 31 healthy headache-free subjects. Coefficients of repeatability and normal limits were calculated. HPT and CPT were lowest in the face. Pooled across regions, the lower repeatability limit for the test/retest ratio was 63% for HPT and 55% for CPT. The upper normal CPT limit varied between 24.5°C and 29.7°C. Lower HPT limits ranged between 35.5°C and 40.8°C. Quantitative sensory methods provide useful information about headache and pain pathophysiology, and it is important to estimate the normal test/retest repeatability range in follow-up studies.


2010 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johann P. Kuhtz-Buschbeck ◽  
Wiebke Andresen ◽  
Stephan Göbel ◽  
René Gilster ◽  
Carsten Stick

About four decades ago, Perl and collaborators were the first ones who unambiguously identified specifically nociceptive neurons in the periphery. In their classic work, they recorded action potentials from single C-fibers of a cutaneous nerve in cats while applying carefully graded stimuli to the skin (Bessou P, Perl ER. Response of cutaneous sensory units with unmyelinated fibers to noxious stimuli. J Neurophysiol 32: 1025–1043, 1969). They discovered polymodal nociceptors, which responded to mechanical, thermal, and chemical stimuli in the noxious range, and differentiated them from low-threshold thermoreceptors. Their classic findings form the basis of the present method that undergraduate medical students experience during laboratory exercises of sensory physiology, namely, quantitative testing of the thermal detection and pain thresholds. This diagnostic method examines the function of thin afferent nerve fibers. We collected data from nearly 300 students that showed that 1) women are more sensitive to thermal detection and thermal pain at the thenar than men, 2) habituation shifts thermal pain thresholds during repetititve testing, 3) the cold pain threshold is rather variable and lower when tested after heat pain than in the reverse case (order effect), and 4) ratings of pain intensity on a visual analog scale are correlated with the threshold temperature for heat pain but not for cold pain. Median group results could be reproduced in a retest. Quantitative sensory testing of thermal thresholds is feasible and instructive in the setting of a laboratory exercise and is appreciated by the students as a relevant and interesting technique.


2006 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 138-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ragnhild Raak ◽  
Mia Wallin

Thermal sensitivity, thermal pain thresholds, and catastrophizing were examined in individuals with whiplash associated disorders (WAD) and in healthy pain-free participants. Quantitative sensory testing (QST) was used to measure skin sensitivity to cold and warmth and cold and heat pain thresholds over both the thenar eminence and the trapezius muscle (TrM) in 17 participants with WAD (age 50.8± 11.3 years) and 18 healthy participants (age 44.8± 10.2 years). The Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) was used to determine pain coping strategies, and visual analogue scales were used for self-assessment of current background pain in individuals in the WAD group as well as experienced pain intensity and unpleasantness after QST and sleep quality in all participants. There were significant differences in warmth threshold and cold and heat pain thresholds of the TrM site between the WAD and pain-free groups. Significant differences between the two groups were also found for the catastrophizing dimension of helplessness in the PCS and in self-assessed quality of sleep. A correlational analysis showed that current background pain is significantly correlated with both cold discrimination and cold pain threshold in the skin over the TrM in individuals with WAD. These findings imply that thermal sensitivity is an important factor to consider in providing nursing care to individuals with WAD. Because biopsychosocial factors also influence the experience of pain in individuals with WAD, the role of nurses includes not only the description of the pain phenomenon but also the identification of relieving and aggravating factors.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2116-2116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda M Brandow ◽  
Robbie Kattappuram ◽  
Cheryl L. Stucky ◽  
Cheryl A. Hillery ◽  
Julie A. Panepinto

Abstract Abstract 2116 Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) pain is associated with colder temperatures, touch, and increased wind speed and barometric pressure. The specific array of associated factors suggests hypersensitivity to tactile stimuli, a characteristic of neuropathic pain. Sickle mice exhibit hypersensitivity at baseline compared to controls to cold, heat, and mechanical stimuli via a TRPV1 mediated pathway. However, it is not known whether humans experience this same hypersensitivity. Thus, the objective of this study was to quantify sensitivity differences to thermal (heat, cold) and mechanical stimuli between SCD patients and healthy African American controls. We hypothesized SCD patients will exhibit hypersensitivity to thermal and mechanical stimuli compared to controls and this hypersensitivity will worsen with age and frequency of pain. We conducted a cross-sectional study of SCD patients in baseline health and race-matched controls age ≥ 7 yrs. Our primary outcome was detection of hypersensitivity to thermal and mechanical stimuli. We excluded those with a pain phenotype other than SCD, overt stroke, analgesics within 24 hrs of testing, or acute SCD pain event within 2 weeks of testing. Subjects underwent quantitative sensory testing (QST) to thermal and mechanical stimuli. QST evaluates the somatosensory system detecting sensory loss (hyposensitivity) or gain (hypersensitivity). Thermal stimulation was performed with a Thermal Sensory Analyzer (Medoc;Israel), an FDA approved computer-assisted device that delivers cold and warm stimuli via a thermode attached to the skin (baseline temperature, 32°C; stimulus range, 0–50°C). Mechanical testing was performed using graded vonFrey monofilaments (force range 0.255 mN to 1078.731 mN). Testing was done on the thenar eminence of the non-dominant hand. Primary outcomes included: 1) Cold Pain Threshold (°C), 2) Heat Pain Threshold (°C), 3) Mechanical Pain Threshold (mN) as reported by “method of limits” where subjects pushed a button (thermal) or spoke (mechanical) when the progressive stimulus was painful. The final outcome was the computed mean of 3 tests (thermal) and 5 tests (mechanical). Independent samples t-tests were used to compare outcomes between SCD patients and controls. Linear regression was used to evaluate the impact of age and gender on pain thresholds in both groups and the impact of lifetime history of pain, defined as total number of emergency department visits or hospitalizations for pain, on pain thresholds in SCD patients. 55 SCD patients and 57 controls were recruited (Jan 2010-June 2011). There were no differences in mean age (15.4 yrs vs.16.3 yrs; p=0.59, t-test) or gender (SCD=60% female vs. Controls=56% female; p=0.70, Pearson Chi-Square). SCD genotypes were 67% (n=37) HbSS, 18% (n=10) HbSC, 11% (n=6), HbSβ+thal, and 4% (n=2) other. SCD patients had significantly lower cold pain thresholds (p=0.008) and heat pain thresholds (p=0.04) compared to controls (Table 1). There were no differences in mechanical pain thresholds (p=0.38) (Table 1). Older age was associated with lower cold pain thresholds (parameter estimate=0.19°C; p=0.05), lower heat pain thresholds (parameter estimate=0.13°C; p=0.0069), and lower mechanical pain thresholds (parameter estimate=0.11mN; p=0.02) in both groups. Gender had no effect on the outcomes (cold pain threshold, p=0.15; heat pain threshold, p=0.07; mechanical pain threshold, p=0.29). Total number of lifetime SCD pain events had no effect on the outcomes (cold pain threshold, p=0.91; heat pain threshold, p=0.65, mechanical pain threshold, p=0.77). SCD patients in baseline health experience increased sensitivity to cold and heat stimuli compared to race-matched controls and this sensitivity worsens with older age. These findings suggest peripheral sensitization may exist in SCD. Further research into how cold and heat sensing receptors and pathways contribute to SCD pain is warranted. Ultimately, this may lead to the development of novel therapeutics targeted to the specific underlying neurobiology of SCD pain that aids in the treatment or prevention of SCD pain.Table 1.Pain Thresholds of SCD Patients and Healthy Controls.OutcomeSCD Patients (Mean ± SD)Controls (Mean ± SD)P-valueCold Pain Threshold (°C)18.5 (7.7)14.1 (9.4)0.008Heat Pain Threshold (°C)42.5 (4.4)44.3 (4.6)0.04Mechanical Pain Threshold (mN)303.9 (409.6)375.6 (451.2)0.38 Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 148-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Emerich ◽  
M. Braeunig ◽  
H.W. Clement ◽  
R. Lüdtke ◽  
R. Huber

1984 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. E. Torebjork ◽  
R. H. LaMotte ◽  
C. J. Robinson

The peripheral neuronal correlates of heat pain elicited from normal skin and from skin made hyperalgesic following a mild heat injury were studied by simultaneously recording, in humans, evoked responses in C mechanoheat (CMH) nociceptors and the magnitude estimations of pain obtained from the same subjects. Subjects made continuous magnitude ratings of pain elicited by short-duration stimuli of 39-51 degrees C delivered to the hairy skin of the calf or foot before and at varying intervals of time after a heat injury induced by a conditioning stimulus (CS) of 50 degrees C, 100 s or 48 degrees C, 360 s. The stimuli were applied with a thermode pressed against the nociceptor's receptive field. For heat stimulations of normal skin, that is, uninjured skin, pain thresholds in 14 experiments with nine subjects ranged from 41 to 49 degrees C, whereas response thresholds for most of the 14 CMH nociceptors were 41 degrees C (in two cases, 43 degrees C). The latter suggested that spatial summation of input from many nociceptors was necessary at pain threshold. An intensity-response function was obtained for each CMH by relating the total number of nerve impulses evoked per stimulus to stimulus temperature. A corresponding magnitude scaling function for pain was obtained by relating the maximum rating of pain elicited by each stimulus to stimulus temperature. The relation between the subject's scaling function and the intensity-response function of his CMH nociceptor varied somewhat from one experiment to the next, regardless of whether the results were obtained from the same or from different subjects. However, when averages were computed for all 14 tests, there was a near linear relationship between the mean number of impulses elicited in the CMHs and the median ratings of pain, over the range of 45-51 degrees C. It was concluded that the magnitude of heat pain sensation was more closely related to the magnitude of response in a population of CMH nociceptors than in any individual nociceptor. At 0.5 min after the CS, the pain thresholds of most subjects were elevated, and the magnitude ratings of pain elicited by supra-threshold stimuli were lower than pre-CS values (hypoalgesia). Corresponding changes were seen in the increased thresholds and decreased responses (fatigue) of most CMHs. By 5-10 min after the CS, the pain thresholds of most subjects were lower, and their magnitude ratings of suprathreshold stimuli were greater than pre-CS values (hyperalgesia).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2002 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agn[egrave]s Langlade ◽  
Claire Jussiau ◽  
Laurent Lamonerie ◽  
Emmanuel Marret ◽  
Francis Bonnet

Revista Dor ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra de Oliveira Claro ◽  
Bruna Akie Kanezawa ◽  
Michele de Camargo ◽  
Vanessa Maria Paes ◽  
José Luiz Marinho Portolez ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgit Kraft ◽  
Nathalie A. Frickey ◽  
Rainer M. Kaufmann ◽  
Marcus Reif ◽  
Richard Frey ◽  
...  

Background Cannabinoid-induced analgesia was shown in animal studies of acute inflammatory and neuropathic pain. In humans, controlled clinical trials with Delta-tetrahydrocannabinol or other cannabinoids demonstrated analgesic efficacy in chronic pain syndromes, whereas the data in acute pain were less conclusive. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of oral cannabis extract in two different human models of acute inflammatory pain and hyperalgesia. Methods The authors conducted a double-blind, crossover study in 18 healthy female volunteers. Capsules containing Delta-tetrahydrocannabinol-standardized cannabis extract or active placebo were orally administered. A circular sunburn spot was induced at one upper leg. Heat and electrical pain thresholds were determined at the erythema, the area of secondary hyperalgesia, and the contralateral leg. Intradermal capsaicin-evoked pain and areas of flare and secondary hyperalgesia were measured. Primary outcome parameters were heat pain thresholds in the sunburn erythema and the capsaicin-evoked area of secondary hyperalgesia. Secondary measures were electrical pain thresholds, sunburn-induced secondary hyperalgesia, and capsaicin-induced pain. Results Cannabis extract did not affect heat pain thresholds in the sunburn model. Electrical thresholds (250 Hz) were significantly lower compared with baseline and placebo. In the capsaicin model, the area of secondary hyperalgesia, flare, and spontaneous pain were not altered. Conclusion To conclude, no analgesic or antihyperalgesic activity of cannabis extract was found in the experiments. Moreover, the results even point to the development of a hyperalgesic state under cannabinoids. Together with previous data, the current results suggest that cannabinoids are not effective analgesics for the treatment of acute nociceptive pain in humans.


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