| Literature DB >> 16719906 |
Lisbeth Dahlin1, Irene Lund, Thomas Lundeberg, Carl Molander.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vibratory stimulation is a potential method for the treatment of pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16719906 PMCID: PMC1481532 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-6-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Assessed levels of detection and pain thresholds in response to vibratory stimulation to one forearm. Descriptive data, showing Pain matcher values as median value and range (min to max, numerical cut-off 0–99).
| Before | During | Immediately after | 10 minutes after | |||||
| Women, n = 29 | men, n = 27 | Women, n = 29 | men, n = 27 | women, n = 29 | men, n = 27 | women, n = 27 | men, n = 24 | |
| Detection threshold | 3 (1 to 8) | 5 (1 to 9) | 4 (1 to 8) | 5 (2 to 8) | 4 (2 to 9) | 5 (1 to 9) | 4 (2 to 7) | 5 (2 to 8) |
| Pain threshold | 12 (5 to 24) | 15 (5 to 71) | 16 (6 to 30) | 17 (7 to 99) | 15 (7 to 24) | 18 (7 to 93) | 12 (6 to 27) | 19 (8 to 93) |
Figure 1Detection threshold. Changes in assessed DT in women (left) and men (right). PM = pain matcher.
Figure 2Pain threshold. Changes in assessed PT in women (left) and men (right). PM = pain matcher.
Figure 3Gender differences. Changes related to gender in assessed DT (left) and PT (right). PM = pain matcher.