Campbell Claudia M, France Christopher R, Robinson Michael E, Logan Henrietta L, Geffken Gary R, Fillingim Roger B
University of Florida, Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Pain. 2008 Jan;134(1-2):91-6. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2007.03.035. Epub 2007 May 4.
A substantial body of literature suggests that the experience of both clinical and experimental pain differs among ethnic groups, with African Americans generally reporting greater sensitivity to chronic and experimentally induced pain when compared to non-Hispanic whites. However, no studies to date have examined nociceptive processes that may underlie these differences. The nociceptive flexion reflex (NFR) is based on the measurement of stimulus-induced spinal reflexes. Prior research suggests that the NFR threshold, or RIII response, is highly correlated with subjective pain thresholds. The current study evaluated responses to the nociceptive flexion reflex in healthy young adults from two different ethnic groups: African Americans (n=29) and non-Hispanic whites (n=28). Perceptual responses (e.g., pain ratings) as well as physiological reflex responses (i.e., biceps femoris EMG) were assessed. Significant ethnic group differences were observed for NFR reflex threshold, with African Americans producing a reflex at lower stimulation intensities relative to non-Hispanic whites. Interestingly, verbal pain ratings at NFR threshold were not significantly different between the groups, suggesting that the lower stimulation intensities required to elicit a reflex in African-American versus non-Hispanic white participants were nonetheless perceived as similar. Psychological Involvement, Positive and Negative Mood, and Rumination were correlated with NFR threshold in a pattern that was consistent across both ethnic groups. These results extend previous research on ethnic differences in self-report measures of pain by demonstrating group differences in a nociceptive muscle reflex.
大量文献表明,不同种族群体在临床疼痛和实验性疼痛体验上存在差异,与非西班牙裔白人相比,非裔美国人通常报告对慢性疼痛和实验诱导疼痛更为敏感。然而,迄今为止尚无研究探讨这些差异背后可能存在的伤害感受过程。伤害感受性屈曲反射(NFR)基于对刺激诱发的脊髓反射的测量。先前的研究表明,NFR阈值或RIII反应与主观疼痛阈值高度相关。本研究评估了来自两个不同种族群体的健康年轻成年人对伤害感受性屈曲反射的反应:非裔美国人(n = 29)和非西班牙裔白人(n = 28)。评估了知觉反应(如疼痛评分)以及生理反射反应(即股二头肌肌电图)。观察到NFR反射阈值存在显著的种族群体差异,与非西班牙裔白人相比,非裔美国人在较低刺激强度下产生反射。有趣的是,两组在NFR阈值时的言语疼痛评分没有显著差异,这表明在非裔美国人和非西班牙裔白人参与者中,引发反射所需的较低刺激强度在感觉上是相似的。心理参与、积极和消极情绪以及沉思与NFR阈值的相关性在两个种族群体中呈现出一致的模式。这些结果通过证明伤害感受性肌肉反射中的群体差异,扩展了先前关于疼痛自我报告测量中种族差异的研究。