• Pancreas · Jul 2007

    Assessment of experimental pain from skin, muscle, and esophagus in patients with chronic pancreatitis.

    • Georg Dimcevski, Camilla Staahl, Søren Due Andersen, Niels Thorsgaard, Peter Funch-Jensen, Lars Arendt-Nielsen, and Asbjørn Mohr Drewes.
    • Department of Medical Gastroenterology, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway.
    • Pancreas. 2007 Jul 1;35(1):22-9.

    ObjectivesComprehensive experimental methods are of major relevance assessing pain mechanisms in patients with chronic pain. Chronic pancreatitis is thought to involve the sensory response in other visceral organs and somatic tissue. We, therefore, aimed at exploring the pain mechanisms in chronic pancreatitis (CP) using a multimodal and multitissue stimulation approach.MethodsTen patients (mean age, 50 years) with CP and 13 healthy controls (mean age, 35 years) participated. None of the patients took analgesics regularly. All were exposed to multimodal (mechanical, thermal, and electrical) experimental pain in the skin, muscles, and esophagus.ResultsThe patients were hyposensitive to mechanical stimulations of the skin (P = 0.001), but there were no differences in the pain to thermal and electrical stimulations. In the muscle and esophagus, no differences in pain thresholds were found. The difference between single and repeated stimulations reflecting the degree of central sensitization was 17% in controls and 36% in patients (P = 0.001). The referred pain area to electrical stimulation was 30.1 cm2 in the patients and 7.7 cm2 for the controls (P = 0.02).ConclusionsThe findings suggest that the balance among central hyperexcitability, neuroplastic changes, and descending pain-modulating pathways may explain the pain response to experimental multimodal stimulations in CP. This will likely also reflect the clinical pain mechanisms and may have important impact in selection of treatment, where drugs with potential effects on these mechanisms should be used.

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