European journal of pain : EJP
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Healthy individuals demonstrate considerable heterogeneity upon dynamic quantitative sensory testing assessment of endogenous pain modulatory mechanisms. For those who stratify into a 'pro-nociceptive profile' cohort, consisting of inefficient conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and elevated temporal summation of pain (TSP), the optimal approach for balancing the net output of pain modulatory processes towards anti-nociception remains unresolved. In this translational healthy human and rat study, we examined whether descending modulation countered spinal amplification during concurrent application of a CPM and TSP paradigm alongside pupillometry since pontine activity was previously linked to functionality of endogenous pain modulatory mechanisms and pupil dilation. ⋯ In this translational healthy human and rat study, activity in descending inhibitory controls did not counter spinal amplification processes underpinned by wind up. Despite pupil dilation being previously linked to modulatory mechanisms, dilatory responses did not offer a reliable indicator of functionality. For pro-nociceptive individuals exhibiting inefficient conditioned pain modulation and/or high temporal summation of pain, dampening faciliatory mechanisms rather than augmenting top-down inhibitory processes may be a more effective pain-relief strategy.