Pain
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Comparative Study
Motor control in complex regional pain syndrome: a kinematic analysis.
This study evaluated movement velocity, frequency, and amplitude, as well as the number of arrests in three different subject groups, by kinematic analysis of repetitive movements during a finger tapping (FT) task. The most affected hands of 80 patients with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) were compared with the most affected hands of 60 patients with Parkinson disease (PD) as well as the nondominant hands of 75 healthy control (HC) subjects. Fifteen seconds of FT with thumb and index finger were recorded by a 60-Hz camera, which allowed the whole movement cycle to be evaluated and the above mentioned movement parameters to be calculated. ⋯ Impairment was not related to pain. Dystonic CRPS patients performed less well than CRPS patients without dystonia. In conclusion, this study shows that voluntary motor control in CRPS patients is impaired at both the affected as well as the unaffected side, pointing at involvement of central motor processing circuits.
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Comparative Study
Reliability of the visual analog scale in children with acute pain in the emergency department.
In children, many psychometric properties of the visual analogue scale (VAS) are known, including the minimum clinically significant difference (10mm on a 100-mm VAS). However, its imprecision or reliability is not well known. Thus, in order to determine the reliability of this scale, a prospective cohort study was performed in patients aged 8-17 years presenting to a pediatric emergency department with acute pain. ⋯ The repeatability coefficient of the VAS for these children was 12 mm when the pain did not change. This implies that, for a child, all pain intensity measurements within 12 mm should be considered the same pain intensity on a paper VAS. This measure should also be evaluated on other types of VAS.
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Comparative Study
Chronic inflammatory pain is associated with increased excitability and hyperpolarization-activated current (Ih) in C- but not Aδ-nociceptors.
Inflammatory pain hypersensitivity results partly from hyperexcitability of nociceptive (damage-sensing) dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons innervating inflamed tissue. However, most of the evidence for this is derived from experiments using acute inflammatory states. Herein, we used several approaches to examine the impact of chronic or persistent inflammation on the excitability of nociceptive DRG neurons and on their expression of I(h) and the underlying hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels, which regulate neuronal excitability. ⋯ This included an afterdischarge response to noxious pinch, which may contribute to inflammatory mechanohyperalgesia, and increased incidence of spontaneous activity (SA) and decreased electrical thresholds, which are likely to contribute to spontaneous pain and nociceptor sensitization, respectively. We also show, using voltage clamp in vivo, immunohistochemistry and behavioral assays that (1) the inflammation-induced nociceptor hyperexcitability is associated, in C- but not Aδ-nociceptors, with increases in the mean I(h) amplitude/density and in the proportion of I(h) expressing neurons, (2) increased proportion of small DRG neurons (mainly IB4-negative) expressing HCN2 but not HCN1 or HCN3 channel protein, (3) increased HCN2- immunoreactivity in the spinal dorsal horn, and (4) attenuation of inflammatory mechanoallodynia with the selective I(h) antagonist, ZD7288. Taken together, the findings suggest that C- but not Aδ-nociceptors sustain chronic inflammatory pain and that I(h)/HCN2 channels contribute to inflammation-induced C-nociceptor hyperexcitability.