Pain
-
Clinical Trial
The effects of distraction on exercise and cold pressor tolerance for chronic low back pain sufferers.
Distraction has been found to be effective for the attenuation of experimental and acute clinical pain but its efficacy for chronic pain management remains unclear. There are even some suggestions that distraction may be a counterproductive strategy for chronic pain sufferers. In this study we found that a word shadowing distraction task increased the ability of a group of 12 female and eight male chronic low back pain (CLBP) sufferers to carry out a brief (maximum 300 s) step-up exercise that temporarily increased their pain (P < 0.05). ⋯ Interestingly, the same distraction task did not increase the cold pressor (CP) tolerance time for the CLBP group but produced a 26% increase in tolerance time for a pain-free control group consisting of nine females and nine males (P < 0.05). Also, performance on the distraction task during the CP was worse for the CLBP group than the controls (P < 0.05). Although these findings should be interpreted cautiously because of the parameters of the experiment, they do suggest that distraction is a potentially useful technique to assist chronic pain sufferers.
-
Clinical Trial
The influence of psychological variables on postoperative anxiety and physical complaints in patients undergoing lumbar surgery.
Previous research has indicated that postoperative distress is influenced by diverse biographic, medical and psychological variables, such as personality, coping behaviours and anxiety. The influence of state variables, apart from anxiety and coping behaviour, has received scant attention. Furthermore, the influence of coping behaviour has remained unclear. ⋯ Preoperative anxiety and fatigue independently predicted more postoperative physical complaints. No associations were found between the coping behaviours and the postoperative variables. The implications of these results are discussed in relation to intervention strategies aimed at diminishing the stress of surgery.
-
The opioid antagonist, naloxone, produces equivocal effects on the magnitude of nociceptive responses in several animal models of persistent pain, including the formalin test. Hindpaw injection of dilute formalin produces not only inflammation but also phasic (Phase 1) and persistent (Phase 2) behavioral and cardiovascular nociceptive responses in the rat. ⋯ Although the 100 mg/kg per h dose significantly decreased these responses, it also produced muscle rigidity and profound bradycardia. We conclude that endogenous opioids do not significantly modulate the nociceptive processing induced by subcutaneous formalin.
-
Clinical Trial
Quantification of local and referred muscle pain in humans after sequential i.m. injections of hypertonic saline.
The aim of the present study was to test (1) whether muscle pain is influenced by temporal and spatial summation, and (2) whether sequential noxious muscle stimuli applied at hourly interstimulus-intervals could produce an increased sensation of pain due to central hyperexcitability. In the study eleven healthy men were exposed to computer-controlled intramuscular infusion of saline (5%) given over 20 s in m. tibialis anterior (m. TA). ⋯ The infusion given 4 h after the sequential infusions tended to produce an increase in the referred pain area and in the pain intensity. In all three experiments significant correlations were found between the VAS peak and the size of the local (R = 0.64, P < 0.0001, n = 231) and referred (R = 0.47, P < 0.0001, n = 231) pain areas. Based on the above results it can be concluded that experimental muscle pain is influenced by temporal and spatial summation.
-
The myofascial trigger point (MTrP) is the hallmark physical finding of the myofascial pain syndrome (MPS). The MTrP itself is characterized by distinctive physical features that include a tender point in a taut band of muscle, a local twitch response (LTR) to mechanical stimulation, a pain referral pattern characteristic of trigger points of specific areas in each muscle, and the reproduction of the patient's usual pain. ⋯ This paper reports an initial attempt to establish the interrater reliability of the trigger point examination that failed, and a second study by the same examiners that included a training period and that successfully established interrater reliability in the diagnosis of the MTrP. The study also showed that the interrater reliability of different features varies, the LTR being the most difficult, and that the interrater reliability of the identification of MTrP features among different muscles also varies.