• Pain · May 2010

    Heterotopic pruritic conditioning and itch--analogous to DNIC in pain?

    • Antoinette I M van Laarhoven, Floris W Kraaimaat, Oliver H Wilder-Smith, Peter C M van de Kerkhof, and Andrea W M Evers.
    • Department of Medical Psychology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. A.vanLaarhoven@mps.umcn.nl
    • Pain. 2010 May 1;149(2):332-7.

    AbstractPain can be endogenously modulated by heterotopic noxious conditioning stimulation (HNCS) through a mechanism which is known as diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC). Since DNIC can be impaired in patients suffering from chronic pain, a comparable impaired itch inhibition may exist in patients suffering from chronic itch. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether heterotopic pruritic conditioning stimulation (HPCS) would display an impaired modulation of itch in patients suffering from chronic itch compared with healthy subjects. To this end, electrical stimuli were applied before and after histamine application (HPCS) to female patients with psoriasis and healthy female control subjects. Subjects reported the intensity of electrically evoked itch before and after HPCS. In order to replicate earlier findings for DNIC, electrically evoked pain was additionally investigated before and after cold stimulation (HNCS). As expected, the intensity of itch evoked by the electrical stimulus was significantly less after than before HPCS in healthy subjects, and the same was found for the intensity of electrically evoked pain after compared to before HNCS. Contrarily, in the patients levels of electrically evoked itch were significantly higher after than before HPCS, and no significant difference in pain intensity before and after HNCS was observed. In line with pain modulation, results suggest that there is a DNIC analogous mechanism for itch, i.e., diffuse pruritic inhibitory control (DPIC), which is impaired in patients with chronic itch, possibly due to a dysregulation of descending itch modulatory systems.Copyright 2010 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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