Bartley Emily J, King Christopher D, Sibille Kimberly T, Cruz-Almeida Yenisel, Riley Joseph L, Glover Toni L, Goodin Burel R, Sotolongo Adriana S, Herbert Matthew S, Bulls Hailey W, Staud Roland, Fessler Barri J, Redden David T, Bradley Laurence A, Fillingim Roger B
University of Florida, Gainesville.
University of Alabama, Birmingham.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2016 Apr;68(4):472-80. doi: 10.1002/acr.22712.
Symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a condition commonly associated with increased pain, disability, and functional limitations. Given the poor correspondence between radiographic evidence and clinical pain, central sensitization has been implicated as a potential mechanism underlying pain facilitation in knee OA. Sex may be a moderator of centrally mediated changes in knee OA pain; however, few studies have systematically assessed this. Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine differences in peripheral and central sensitization in men and women with symptomatic knee OA, as well as to determine whether these differences vary across age (middle age versus older age).
Participants (n = 288) between the ages of 45 and 85 years completed a battery of quantitative sensory pain procedures assessing sensitivity to contact heat, cold pressor, mechanical pressure, and punctate stimuli. Differences in temporal summation (TS) were examined, as well as measures of clinical pain and functional performance.
When compared to men, women exhibited greater sensitivity to multiple pain modalities (i.e., lower heat, cold, pressure thresholds/tolerances, greater TS of pain); however, there were no sex differences in clinical pain, with the exception of greater widespread pain observed in women. Although there were select age-related differences in pain sensitivity, sex differences in pain varied minimally across the age cohort.
Overall, these findings provide evidence for greater overall sensitivity to experimental pain in women with symptomatic knee OA compared to men, suggesting that enhanced central sensitivity may be an important contributor to pain in this group.
有症状的膝关节骨关节炎(OA)通常与疼痛加剧、功能障碍和功能受限有关。鉴于影像学证据与临床疼痛之间的对应性较差,中枢敏化被认为是膝关节OA疼痛易化的潜在机制。性别可能是膝关节OA疼痛中枢介导变化的调节因素;然而,很少有研究系统地评估这一点。因此,本研究的目的是检查有症状的膝关节OA男性和女性在外周和中枢敏化方面的差异,并确定这些差异是否随年龄(中年与老年)而变化。
年龄在45至85岁之间的参与者(n = 288)完成了一系列定量感觉疼痛程序,评估对接触热、冷压、机械压力和点状刺激的敏感性。检查了时间总和(TS)的差异以及临床疼痛和功能表现的测量指标。
与男性相比,女性对多种疼痛模式表现出更高的敏感性(即更低的热、冷、压力阈值/耐受性,更大的疼痛TS);然而,临床疼痛方面没有性别差异,不过女性观察到更广泛的疼痛除外。虽然在疼痛敏感性方面存在一些与年龄相关的差异,但疼痛的性别差异在整个年龄组中变化最小。
总体而言,这些发现为有症状的膝关节OA女性比男性对实验性疼痛具有更高的总体敏感性提供了证据,表明增强的中枢敏感性可能是该组疼痛的重要促成因素。