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Pain Adaptability in Individuals With Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain Is Not Associated With Conditioned Pain Modulation

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 09:03 authored by Dawn Wong Lit Wan, Lars Arendt-Nielsen, Kelun Wang, Charlie XueCharlie Xue, Yanyi WangYanyi Wang, Zhen ZhengZhen Zheng
Healthy humans can be divided into the pain adaptive (PA) and the pain nonadaptive (PNA) groups; PA showed a greater decrease in pain rating to a cold pressor test (CPT) than PNA. This study examined if the dichotomy of pain adaptability existed in individuals with chronic musculoskeletal pain. CPTs at 2°C and 7°C were used to assess the status of pain adaptability in participants with either chronic nonspecific low back pain or knee osteoarthritis. The participants’ potency of conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and local inhibition were measured. The strengths of pain adaptability at both CPTs were highly correlated. PA and PNA did not differ in their demographic characteristics, pain thresholds from thermal and pressure stimuli, or potency of local inhibition or CPM. PA reached their maximum pain faster than PNA (t41 = -2.76, P <.01), and had a gradual reduction of pain unpleasantness over 7 days whereas PNA did not (F6,246 = 3.01, P =.01). The dichotomy of pain adaptability exists in musculoskeletal pain patients. Consistent with the healthy human study, the strength of pain adaptability and potency of CPM are not related. Pain adaptability could be another form of endogenous pain inhibition of which clinical implication is yet to be understood. Perspective: The dichotomy of pain adaptability was identified in healthy humans. The current study confirms that this dichotomy also exists in individuals with chronic musculoskeletal pain, and could be reliably assessed with CPTs at 2°C and 7°C. Similar to the healthy human study, pain adaptability is not associated with CPM, and may reflect the temporal aspect of pain inhibition.

History

Journal

Journal of Pain

Volume

19

Issue

8

Start page

897

End page

909

Total pages

13

Publisher

Churchill Livingstone

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2018 The American Pain Society

Former Identifier

2006088057

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-01-31

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