| Literature DB >> 27845724 |
Abstract
There are many ways in which pain in animals can be measured and these are based on a variety of phenomena that are related to either the perception of pain or alterations in physical or behavioural features of the animal that are caused by that pain. The features of pain that are most useful for assessment in clinical environments are not always the best to use in a research environment. This is because the aims and objectives of the two settings are different and so whilst particular techniques will have the same advantages and disadvantages in clinical and research environments, these considerations may become more or less of a drawback when moving from one environment to the other. For example, a simple descriptive pain scale has a number of advantages and disadvantages. In a clinical setting the advantages are very useful and the disadvantages are less relevant, but in a research environment the advantages are less important and the disadvantages can become more problematic. This paper will focus on pain in the research environment and after a brief revision of the pathophysiological systems involved will attempt to outline the major advantages and disadvantages of the more commonly used measurement techniques that have been used for studies in the area of pain perception and analgesia. This paper is expanded from a conference proceedings paper presented at the International Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Conference in San Diego, USA.Entities:
Keywords: pain measurement; research techniques
Year: 2016 PMID: 27845724 PMCID: PMC5126773 DOI: 10.3390/ani6110071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of the sensory nociceptive pathways. EEG: electrocardiograma.
Advantages and disadvantages of commonly used threshold testing modalities.
| Modality of Stimulus | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanical | Stimulation via mechanical transducers | No standard for size and shape of probe |
| Easy to control and terminate stimulus | Difficult to compare between studies with different equipment | |
| Stable over time | Co-stimulation can be a problem | |
| Little tissue damage | ||
| Thermal | No co-stimulation | Control and termination more complex |
| Probe characteristics less important | Tissue damage may be an issue | |
| Easy to compare different studies | Background temperature is a variable | |
| Electrical | Little tissue damage | Bypasses transducer |
| Very easy to control and terminate stimulus | Texture of sensation mixed |
Advantages and disadvantages of simple descriptive pain scales.
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|
| Rapid to administer | Data are categorical (non-parametric) |
| Little extra paperwork | Variations between assessors |
| Conceptually simple | Subjective measurement |
| Non-invasive |