Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Emergencies and Critical Care, Oslo University Hospital, Rikshospitalet, Oslo, Norway.
J Pain. 2013 Jul;14(7):699-708. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2013.01.780.
An inverse association between resting blood pressure (BP) and acute pain sensitivity is well documented. Whether BP-related hypoalgesia differs by gender is unclear from prior work. Whether it increases proportionally with BP throughout the full BP range is also unknown. We examined BP-related hypoalgesia in a general population sample (n = 10,371, aged 30-87) of equal gender distribution reflecting the extremely low through hypertensive BP range. Resting BP was assessed and individuals participated in a standardized cold pressor test, providing pain ratings every 9 seconds. For systolic BP (SBP), a significant SBP × Gender interaction was observed on mean pain ratings (P < .001). Females displayed significant BP-related hypoalgesia (P < .001), with males showing a 38% smaller effect (P < .001). A similar DBP × Gender interaction was also observed (P < .05). Spline regression indicated a significant (P < .001) change in slope of the SBP-pain association at 140 mmHg. Among individuals with lower resting SBP (<140/90), increasing hypoalgesia with increasing SBP levels was observed (P < .001), with no further increases in those with higher BP (≥140/90; P > .10). This is the first large-scale study to confirm past results suggesting that BP-related hypoalgesia differs by gender; that is, females exhibited greater hypoalgesia. BP-related hypoalgesia appears subject to ceiling effects in the hypertensive BP range.
Females show greater BP-related hypoalgesia than males, highlighting gender differences in endogenous antinociceptive systems. Extent of BP-related hypoalgesia does not increase further once resting pressures reach the hypertensive range, suggesting persistent maximal demands on these antinociceptive systems among hypertensive individuals.
休息时血压(BP)与急性疼痛敏感性之间呈负相关,这一点已有充分的文献记载。先前的研究结果并不清楚性别是否会影响与血压相关的镇痛作用。此外,我们也不知道这种镇痛作用是否会随着血压在整个血压范围内成比例地增加。我们在一个性别分布均匀的一般人群样本(n=10371,年龄 30-87 岁)中检查了与血压相关的镇痛作用,该样本反映了从极低血压到高血压的整个血压范围。评估了休息时的血压,并且个体参加了标准化的冷加压试验,每 9 秒提供一次疼痛评分。对于收缩压(SBP),平均疼痛评分上观察到 SBP×性别交互作用(P<0.001)。女性表现出与血压相关的镇痛作用显著降低(P<0.001),而男性的作用降低幅度较小(P<0.001)。还观察到舒张压(DBP)×性别交互作用类似(P<0.05)。样条回归表明,SBP-疼痛关联的斜率在 140mmHg 时发生显著变化(P<0.001)。在休息时 SBP 较低的个体中(<140/90),随着 SBP 水平的升高,观察到镇痛作用的增加(P<0.001),而在血压较高的个体中(≥140/90;P>0.10)则没有进一步增加。这是第一项大型研究,证实了过去的结果,表明与血压相关的镇痛作用存在性别差异;即女性表现出更大的镇痛作用。在高血压的血压范围内,与血压相关的镇痛作用似乎受到上限效应的影响。
女性比男性表现出更大的与血压相关的镇痛作用,突出了内源性镇痛系统中的性别差异。一旦静息压力达到高血压范围,与血压相关的镇痛作用就不会进一步增加,这表明高血压个体对这些镇痛系统的持续最大需求。