• Pain · Jul 2010

    'Pain inhibits pain' mechanisms: Is pain modulation simply due to distraction?

    • Ruth Moont, Dorit Pud, Elliot Sprecher, Gil Sharvit, and David Yarnitsky.
    • The Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Israel Department of Neurology, Rambam Health Care Campus, Haifa, Israel.
    • Pain. 2010 Jul 1; 150 (1): 113-120.

    Abstract'Diffuse noxious inhibitory controls' (DNIC), a form of supraspinal descending endogenous analgesia, requires a noxious conditioning stimulus for pain attenuation. This may be partly dependent on a distraction effect. The term "conditioned pain modulation" (CPM) has recently been introduced to describe the psychophysical paradigm to test DNIC. The present study aimed to determine whether distraction and tonic heat stimulation inhibit pain through the same or different mechanisms by looking at whether there is a similar or even an additive effect on pain attenuation. Test pain was brief heat stimulation applied to the left volar of 34 healthy volunteers. For conditioning, the right hand was immersed in 46.5 degrees C water. Distraction was provided by three different difficulty levels of continuous cognitive visual tasks. Experimental blocks consisted of test pain: (1) alone; 'baseline', (2) with conditioning pain; 'CPM', (3) with distraction; 'distraction' and (4) with conditioning pain and distraction; 'combined'. They were randomized and repeated three times and pain intensity and unpleasantness rated. Results showed an overall effect of experimental block on test pain intensity (P=0.0125). Post-hoc tests revealed a significant reduction in pain intensity ratings under Combined (21.2+/-2.3; mean+/-SEM) compared to CPM alone (16.0+/-2.3) (P<0.05). Furthermore, at all levels of distraction there were always a few subjects who were not distracted despite expressing CPM. Based on the additive effect of CPM and distraction on pain inhibition, and the cases of no distraction despite CPM, we suggest that CPM acts independently from distraction.Copyright 2010 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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