Literature DB >> 27045524

Pain facilitation and pain inhibition during conditioned pain modulation in fibromyalgia and in healthy controls.

Stéphane Potvin1,2, Serge Marchand3,4.   

Abstract

Although fibromyalgia (FM) is associated with a deficit in inhibitory conditioned pain modulation (CPM), the discriminative power of CPM procedures is unknown. Moreover, the high intersubject heterogeneity in CPM responses in FM raises the possibility that a sizeable subgroup of these patients may experience pain facilitation during CPM, but the phenomenon has not been explicitly studied. To address these issues, 96 patients with FM and 71 healthy controls were recruited. Thermal stimuli were used to measure pain thresholds. Pain inhibition was elicited using a tonic thermal test (Peltier thermode) administered before and after activation of CPM mechanisms using a cold pressor test. Thermal pain thresholds were lower in patients with FM than in healthy controls. Pain ratings during the cold pressor test were higher in patients with FM, relative to controls. The CPM inhibitory efficacy was lower in patients with FM than in controls. The CPM procedure had good specificity (78.9%) but low sensitivity (45.7%), whereas a composite pain index had good sensitivity (75.0%) and specificity (78.9%). Finally, the rate of patients with FM who reported pain facilitation during the CPM procedure was found to be significantly increased compared with that of controls (41.7% vs 21.2%). The good discriminative power of the composite pain index highlights the need for further validation studies using mechanistically relevant psychophysical procedures in FM. The low sensitivity of the CPM procedure, combined with the large proportion of patients with FM experiencing pain facilitation during CPM, strongly suggests that endogenous pain inhibition mechanisms are deeply impaired in patients with FM, but only in a subgroup of them.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27045524     DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000573

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pain        ISSN: 0304-3959            Impact factor:   6.961


  42 in total

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2.  Resting Functional Connectivity of the Periaqueductal Gray Is Associated With Normal Inhibition and Pathological Facilitation in Conditioned Pain Modulation.

Authors:  Daniel E Harper; Eric Ichesco; Andrew Schrepf; Johnson P Hampson; Daniel J Clauw; Tobias Schmidt-Wilcke; Richard E Harris; Steven E Harte
Journal:  J Pain       Date:  2018-01-31       Impact factor: 5.820

3.  Impact of Therapeutic Interventions on Pain Intensity and Endogenous Pain Modulation in Knee Osteoarthritis: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

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Journal:  Pain Med       Date:  2019-05-01       Impact factor: 3.750

4.  Pain extent is associated with pain intensity but not with widespread pressure or thermal pain sensitivity in women with fibromyalgia syndrome.

Authors:  Marco Barbero; César Fernández-de-Las-Peñas; María Palacios-Ceña; Corrado Cescon; Deborah Falla
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2017-02-04       Impact factor: 2.980

Review 5.  The plasticity of descending controls in pain: translational probing.

Authors:  Kirsty Bannister; A H Dickenson
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2017-05-26       Impact factor: 5.182

6.  Signature for Pain Recovery IN Teens (SPRINT): protocol for a multisite prospective signature study in chronic musculoskeletal pain.

Authors:  Laura Simons; Massieh Moayedi; Robert C Coghill; Jennifer Stinson; Martin S Angst; Nima Aghaeepour; Brice Gaudilliere; Christopher D King; Marina López-Solà; Marie-Eve Hoeppli; Emma Biggs; Ed Ganio; Sara E Williams; Kenneth R Goldschneider; Fiona Campbell; Danielle Ruskin; Elliot J Krane; Suellen Walker; Gillian Rush; Marissa Heirich
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-06-08       Impact factor: 3.006

Review 7.  Pain Modulation: From Conditioned Pain Modulation to Placebo and Nocebo Effects in Experimental and Clinical Pain.

Authors:  Janie Damien; Luana Colloca; Carmen-Édith Bellei-Rodriguez; Serge Marchand
Journal:  Int Rev Neurobiol       Date:  2018-08-14       Impact factor: 3.230

8.  Experimental evaluation of central pain processes in young women with primary dysmenorrhea.

Authors:  Laura A Payne; Laura C Seidman; Myung-Shin Sim; Andrea J Rapkin; Bruce D Naliboff; Lonnie K Zeltzer
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2019-06       Impact factor: 7.926

9.  A novel paradigm to evaluate conditioned pain modulation in fibromyalgia.

Authors:  Cynthia J Schoen; Jacob N Ablin; Eric Ichesco; Rupal J Bhavsar; Laura Kochlefl; Richard E Harris; Daniel J Clauw; Richard H Gracely; Steven E Harte
Journal:  J Pain Res       Date:  2016-09-26       Impact factor: 3.133

10.  Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS): towards the development of a clinic-friendly method for the evaluation of excitatory and inhibitory pain mechanisms.

Authors:  Monica Sean; Alexia Coulombe-Lévêque; Matthieu Vincenot; Marylie Martel; Louis Gendron; Serge Marchand; Guillaume Léonard
Journal:  Can J Pain       Date:  2021-03-23
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