Pain
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Little is known about the extent to which individuals vary versus remain stable in their pain-related catastrophizing, or to which catastrophizing is associated with pain and related problems on a daily basis. We used daily electronic interviews to examine the: (1) reliability and validity of a brief daily catastrophizing measure; (2) stability of catastrophizing; (3) patient characteristics associated with catastrophizing; (4) associations between catastrophizing and concurrent and subsequent outcomes (pain, activity interference, jaw use limitations, and negative mood), between and within patients; and (5) associations between pain and subsequent catastrophizing. One hundred patients with chronic temporomandibular disorder pain completed electronic interviews three times a day for 2 weeks [mean (SD) number of interviews=46 (15)]. ⋯ Daily catastrophizing was associated significantly with concurrent outcomes, between- and within-subjects (P < 0.001); however, associations with same-day subsequent outcomes were greatly attenuated after adjusting for prior outcome levels. Similarly, daily pain was associated significantly with subsequent catastrophizing, but this association was no longer statistically significant after adjusting for prior catastrophizing. The data indicate that catastrophizing is stable over short periods of time in the absence of substantial change in pain, and that within patients, times of greater catastrophizing are associated with worse pain, disability, and mood.
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Comparative Study
Sensitization to bradykinin B1 and B2 receptor activation in UV-B irradiated human skin.
Bradykinin B1 and B2 receptors contribute to nociceptor sensitization under inflammatory conditions. Here, we examined the vascular inflammatory responses and nociceptive effects resulting from activation of B1 and B2 receptors in healthy and UV-B irradiated skin in human volunteers. The B1 receptor agonist des-Arg(10)-Kallidin (10(-6)-10(-3)M) and the B2 receptor agonist bradykinin (10(-9)-10(-4)M) were administered by dermal microdialysis to the ventral thigh. ⋯ In normal skin, both B1 and B2 receptor activation dose-dependently evoked pain, vasodilatation and protein extravasation. In UV-B irradiated skin, pain sensation and axon reflex vasodilatation were enhanced by both B1 and B2 agonists, whereas local vasodilatation was increased only following B1 receptor activation. The UV-B irradiation did not enhance B1 and B2 receptor-induced protein extravasation indicating a differential sensitization of the neuronal, but not the vascular response.
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A man in his 50's with a prior traumatic brain injury and multiple psychiatric disorders developed acute pain and swelling in his left leg distal to the mid shin. These symptoms arose during an exacerbation of his post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). ⋯ A diagnosis of conversion disorder was technically excluded because the findings met criteria for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) type I. Based on recent research into the neurobiology of CRPS, PTSD and conversion disorder, we propose a supraspinal mechanism which could explain how emotional stress can produce both symptoms and signs.
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Comparative Study
Antihyperalgesic effects of cizolirtine in diabetic rats: behavioral and biochemical studies.
Although clinically well controlled at the metabolic level, type I diabetes resulting from an insufficient insulin secretion remains the cause of severe complications. In particular, diabetes can be associated with neuropathic pain which fails to be treated by classical analgesics. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of a novel non opioid analgesic, cizolirtine, to reduce mechanical hyperalgesia associated with streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes, in the rat. ⋯ Measurements of the spinal release of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) through intrathecal perfusion under halothane-anesthesia showed that acute administration of cizolirtine (80 mg/kg, i.p.) significantly diminished (-36%) the peptide outflow in diabetic rats suffering from neuropathic pain. This effect as well as the antihyperalgesic effect of cizolirtine were prevented by the alpha(2)-adrenoreceptor antagonist idazoxan (2 mg/kg, i.p.). These data suggest that the antihyperalgesic effect of cizolirtine in diabetic rats suffering from neuropathic pain implies an alpha(2)-adrenoceptor-dependent presynaptic inhibition of CGRP-containing primary afferent fibers.
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Comparative Study
Neuroelectric source imaging of steady-state movement-related cortical potentials in human upper extremity amputees with and without phantom limb pain.
Whereas several studies reported a close relationship between changes in the somatotopic organization of primary somatosensory cortex and phantom limb pain, the relationship between alterations in the motor cortex and amputation-related phenomena has not yet been explored in detail. This study used steady-state movement-related cortical potentials (MRCPs) combined with neuroelectric source imaging to assess the relationship of changes in motor cortex and amputation-related phenomena such as painful and non-painful phantom and residual limb sensations, telescoping, and prosthesis use. Eight upper limb amputees were investigated. ⋯ Non-painful phantom sensations as well as painful and non-painful residual limb sensations were unrelated to motor cortical reorganization. A higher amount of motor reorganization was associated with less daily prosthesis use, which also tended to be related to more severe phantom limb pain. These results extend previous findings of a positive relationship between somatosensory reorganization and phantom limb pain to the motor domain and suggest a potential positive effect of prosthesis use on phantom limb pain and cortical reorganization.