Interstitial concentration of serotonin is increased in myalgic human trapezius muscle during rest, repetitive work and mental stress – anin vivomicrodialysis study

Author(s):  
Bijar Ghafouri ◽  
Britt K. Larsson ◽  
Anna Sjörs ◽  
Per Leandersson ◽  
Björn U. C. Gerdle
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Wijsman ◽  
Bernard Grundlehner ◽  
Julien Penders ◽  
Hermie Hermens

2008 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 356-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence M. Schleifer ◽  
Thomas W. Spalding ◽  
Scott E. Kerick ◽  
Jeffrey R. Cram ◽  
Ronald Ley ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Wijsman ◽  
Bernard Grundlehner ◽  
Julien Penders ◽  
Hermie Hermens

Author(s):  
Florestan Wagenblast ◽  
Robert Seibt ◽  
Thomas Läubli ◽  
Monika A. Rieger ◽  
Benjamin Steinhilber

Abstract. Objective quantification of mental stress in the workplace would be beneficial for designing work tasks to avoid the negative consequences of mental stress. Methods such as surface electromyography have proven to be sensitive to mental demands. However, there is little knowledge about the muscle response and moderating factors during anticipatory stress paradigms. This study examined whether the personality dimension neuroticism moderates the muscle response to the expectation of an unpredictable electrical shock. Forty-seven subjects underwent three expectation phases, in which they could expect a pleasant audio signal (NoShock) or an electric shock in two conditions (anticipation of the first: Shock1, and second electric shock: Shock2) at an unpredictable moment. The frontalis muscle activity and the upper and upper/middle parts of the trapezius muscle were recorded using surface electromyography. Neuroticism was surveyed using the Big Five Inventory to assign the subjects to a group with lower or higher neuroticism. Shock1 only induced higher trapezius muscle activity in the higher neuroticism group, which vanished during Shock2, while the frontalis muscle showed no significant effects. The results suggest that neuroticism should be considered a moderating factor in assessing anticipatory stress using surface electromyography at the trapezius muscle.


Cephalalgia ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Ashina ◽  
B Stallknecht ◽  
L Bendtsen ◽  
JF Pedersen ◽  
S Schifter ◽  
...  

Increased muscle tenderness is the most prominent finding in patients with tension-type headache, and it has recently been shown that muscle blood flow is diminished in response to static exercise in tender points in these patients. Although tenderness has been ascribed to local inflammation and release of inflammatory mediators, the interstitial concentration of inflammatory mediators has not previously been studied in tender muscles of patients with tension-type headache. The aim of the present study was to investigate in vivo concentrations of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP), glutamate, bradykinin and other metabolites in a tender point of patients with chronic tension-type headache, in the resting state as well as in response to static exercise, and to compare findings with measurements in a matched non-tender point of healthy controls. We recruited 16 patients with chronic tension-type headache and 17 healthy control subjects. Two microdialysis catheters were inserted into the trapezius muscle and dialysates were collected at rest, 15 and 30 min after start of static exercise (10% of maximal force) and 15 and 30 min after end of exercise. All samples were coded and analysed blindly. There was no difference in resting concentration of any inflammatory mediators or metabolites between tender patients and non-tender controls ( P > 0.05). We also found no difference in change in interstitial concentration of ATP, PGE2, glutamate, glucose, pyruvate and urea from baseline to exercise and post-exercise periods between patients and controls ( P > 0.05). The present study provides in vivo evidence of normal interstitial levels of inflammatory mediators and metabolites in tender trapezius muscle in patients with chronic tension-type headache during both rest and static exercise. Thus, our data suggest that tender points in these patients are not sites of ongoing inflammation.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changiz Mohiyeddini ◽  
Aminah Jaber ◽  
Jolanta Opacka-Juffry

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