Pain Center South, Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Odense, Denmark.
Faculty of Health Sciences, Institute of Clinical Research, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Pain Med. 2018 Nov 1;19(11):2212-2222. doi: 10.1093/pm/pny009.
Exercise increases pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) in exercising and nonexercising muscles, known as exercise-induced hypoalgesia (EIH). No studies have investigated the test-retest reliability of change in PPTs after aerobic exercise. Primary objectives were to compare the effect on PPTs after an incremental bicycling exercise compared with quiet rest and to investigate the relative and absolute test-retest reliability of the test stimulus (PPT) and the absolute and relative EIH response in exercising and nonexercising muscles.
Laboratory.
In two sessions, PPTs in the quadriceps and trapezius muscles were assessed before and after 15 minutes of quiet rest and 15 minutes of bicycling in 34 healthy subjects. Habitual physical activity was assessed by the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ).
Bicycling increased PPTs in exercising and nonexercising muscles in both sessions (P < 0.05). The magnitude of the EIH response in the exercising muscle was, however, larger in the second compared with the first session (P < 0.015). PPTs showed excellent (intraclass correlation [ICC] ≥ 0.84) within-session and between-session test-retest reliability. The EIH response in exercising and nonexercising muscles demonstrated fair (ICC = 0.45) between-session relative test-retest reliability, but agreement in EIH responders between sessions was not significant (quadriceps: κ = 0.24, P = 0.15; trapezius: κ = 0.01, P = 0.97). Positive correlations between the IPAQ score and PPTs were found (quadriceps: r = 0.44, P = 0.009; trapezius: r = 0.31, P = 0.07) before exercise. No significant association was found between IPAQ and EIH.
Incremental bicycling exercise increased PPTs with fair relative and absolute reliability of the EIH response. These data might have an impact on future studies investigating EIH and for clinicians designing exercise programs for pain relief.
运动可增加运动和非运动肌肉的压力疼痛阈值(PPT),即运动诱导的痛觉减退(EIH)。目前尚无研究调查有氧运动后 PPT 变化的测试-再测试可靠性。主要目的是比较递增自行车运动与安静休息对 PPT 的影响,并研究运动和非运动肌肉的测试刺激(PPT)和绝对及相对 EIH 反应的相对和绝对测试-再测试可靠性。
实验室。
在两次试验中,34 名健康受试者分别在安静休息 15 分钟和骑自行车 15 分钟前后,评估股四头肌和斜方肌的 PPT。习惯性体力活动通过国际体力活动问卷(IPAQ)进行评估。
自行车运动在两次试验中均增加了运动和非运动肌肉的 PPT(P<0.05)。然而,与第一次试验相比,第二次试验中运动肌肉的 EIH 反应幅度更大(P<0.015)。PPT 在单次和多次试验中均具有极好的测试-再测试可靠性(组内相关系数[ICC]≥0.84)。运动和非运动肌肉的 EIH 反应在单次试验中具有适度的相对测试-再测试可靠性(ICC=0.45),但两次试验中 EIH 反应者的一致性并不显著(股四头肌:κ=0.24,P=0.15;斜方肌:κ=0.01,P=0.97)。在运动前发现 IPAQ 评分与 PPT 之间存在正相关(股四头肌:r=0.44,P=0.009;斜方肌:r=0.31,P=0.07)。IPAQ 与 EIH 之间无显著相关性。
递增自行车运动可增加 PPT,EIH 反应的相对和绝对可靠性适中。这些数据可能会对未来研究 EIH 以及为临床医生设计用于缓解疼痛的运动方案产生影响。