Rosier Elisa M, Iadarola Michael J, Coghill Robert C
Pain and Neurosensory Mechanisms Branch, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Pain. 2002 Jul;98(1-2):205-16. doi: 10.1016/s0304-3959(02)00048-9.
The reproducibility of both the conscious experience of pain and the reproducibility of psychophysical assessments of pain remain critical, yet poorly characterized factors in pain research and treatment. To assess the reproducibility of both the pain experience and two methods of pain assessment, 15 subjects evaluated experimental heat pain during four weekly sessions. In each session, both brief (5s) and prolonged (90s) heat stimuli were utilized to determine effects of stimulus duration on reproducibility. Multiple presentations of the brief heat stimuli in each session were used to evaluate effects of response averaging. Both visual analog scales (VAS) and randomized verbal descriptor scales (VDS) were employed to better distinguish variations in the pain experience from variations in pain scale usage. Subjects also rated the intensity of visual stimuli in order to provide an independent assessment of the session-to-session variation in the use of both types of scales. Within-subjects analyses revealed that ratings of visual stimuli exhibited significantly less session-to-session variation than ratings of heat pain. Thus, pain perceptions were more variable than perceptions of visual stimuli after controlling for session-to-session variations in scale usage. Comparisons between scales indicated that intensity ratings acquired with the VAS had significantly smaller session-to-session variation than those acquired with the VDS, although VDS ratings were spread across a larger range of the scale. For both scales, analyses of the effects of stimulus averaging and stimulus duration revealed that averaging multiple assessments of the same stimulus substantially reduces session-to-session variation and that multiple assessments of brief stimuli produce responses which are more reproducible than a single presentation of a prolonged stimulus. However, the VAS was significantly more sensitive to small differences in perceived pain intensity and pain unpleasantness, and did not exhibit some of the order effects present with the VDS. Taken together, these results indicate that the reproducibility of psychophysical ratings of pain can be maximized: (1) by averaging responses to multiple, brief stimuli; (2) by providing subjects with a training period distinct from the study period; and (3) by ensuring that interpretation of scale parameters remains constant over time. Thus, although the experiences of both experimental and clinical pain are highly variable, pain assessment procedures can be structured to minimize session-to-session variability.
疼痛的自觉体验的可重复性以及疼痛的心理物理学评估的可重复性,在疼痛研究和治疗中仍然是关键因素,但对其特征的描述却很欠缺。为了评估疼痛体验以及两种疼痛评估方法的可重复性,15名受试者在四周内每周进行一次实验性热痛评估。在每次评估中,均使用短暂(5秒)和持续(90秒)热刺激来确定刺激持续时间对可重复性的影响。每次评估中多次呈现短暂热刺激,以评估反应平均化的效果。同时使用视觉模拟量表(VAS)和随机言语描述量表(VDS),以便更好地区分疼痛体验的变化与疼痛量表使用的变化。受试者还对视觉刺激的强度进行评分,以便对两种量表使用过程中的逐次变化进行独立评估。受试者内分析显示,视觉刺激评分的逐次变化明显小于热痛评分。因此,在控制了量表使用的逐次变化后,疼痛感知比视觉刺激感知更具变异性。量表之间的比较表明,VAS获得的强度评分的逐次变化明显小于VDS获得的评分,尽管VDS评分分布在更大的量表范围内。对于两种量表,对刺激平均化和刺激持续时间的影响分析表明,对同一刺激进行多次评估的平均化可大幅降低逐次变化,并且对短暂刺激的多次评估产生的反应比长时间刺激的单次呈现更具可重复性。然而,VAS对感知疼痛强度和疼痛不适感的微小差异更为敏感,并且没有表现出VDS存在的一些顺序效应。综合来看,这些结果表明,疼痛心理物理学评分的可重复性可以通过以下方式最大化:(1)对多个短暂刺激的反应进行平均化;(2)为受试者提供一个与研究期不同的训练期;(3)确保量表参数的解释随时间保持不变。因此,尽管实验性疼痛和临床疼痛的体验高度可变,但疼痛评估程序可以进行结构化设计,以尽量减少逐次变异性。