NHMRC Centre of Clinical Research Excellence in Spinal Pain, Injury and Health, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia.
Neurorehabilitation Laboratory, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Charlestown, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Dec 8;16(12):e0260715. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260715. eCollection 2021.
Movement adapts during acute pain. This is assumed to reduce nociceptive input, but the interpretation may not be straightforward. We investigated whether movement adaptation during pain reflects a purposeful search for a less painful solution. Three groups of participants performed two blocks (Baseline, Experimental) of wrist movements in the radial-ulnar direction. For the Control group (n = 10) both blocks were painfree. In two groups, painful electrical stimulation was applied at the elbow in Experimental conditions when the wrist crossed radial-ulnar neutral. Different stimulus intensities were given for specific wrist angles in a secondary direction (flexion-extension) as the wrist passed radial-ulnar neutral (Pain 5-1 group:painful stimulation at 5 or ~1/10-n = 21; Pain 5-0 group:5 or 0(no stimulation)/10-n = 6)). Participants were not informed about the less painful alternative and could use any strategy. We recorded the percentage of movements using the wrist flexion/extension alignment that evoked the lower intensity noxious stimulus, movement variability, and change in wrist/forearm alignment during pain. Participants adapted their strategy of wrist movement during pain provocation and reported less pain over time. Three adaptations of wrist movement were observed; (i) greater use of the wrist alignment with no/less noxious input (Pain 5-1, n = 8/21; Pain 5-0, n = 2/6); (ii) small (n = 9/21; n = 3/6) or (iii) large (n = 4/21; n = 1/6) change of wrist/forearm alignment to a region that was not allocated to provide an actual reduction in noxious stimulus. Pain reduction was achieved with "taking action" to relieve pain and did not depend on reduced noxious stimulus.
在急性疼痛期间,运动发生适应性变化。人们认为这可以减少伤害性传入,但这种解释可能并不简单。我们研究了在疼痛期间的运动适应是否反映了对减轻疼痛的解决方案的有意探索。三组参与者在桡尺方向上进行了两次手腕运动(基线、实验)。对于对照组(n = 10),两个阶段都是无痛的。在两个组中,当手腕穿过桡尺中立位时,在实验条件下,肘部会施加疼痛的电刺激。在另一个次要方向(屈伸)中,对于特定的手腕角度,给予不同的刺激强度,当手腕穿过桡尺中立位时(疼痛 5-1 组:在5 或1/10 时给予疼痛刺激,n = 21;疼痛 5-0 组:~5 或 0(无刺激)/10,n = 6))。参与者不知道更不痛的选择,可以使用任何策略。我们记录了在诱发疼痛时使用引起较低强度伤害性刺激的手腕屈伸对准的运动百分比、运动变异性以及手腕/前臂对准的变化。参与者在疼痛诱发期间调整了手腕运动策略,并随着时间的推移报告疼痛减轻。观察到三种手腕运动的适应性变化:(i)更大程度地使用无/较少伤害性输入的手腕对准(疼痛 5-1,n = 8/21;疼痛 5-0,n = 2/6);(ii)小(n = 9/21;n = 3/6)或(iii)大(n = 4/21;n = 1/6)的手腕/前臂对准变化到未分配以实际减少伤害性刺激的区域。疼痛减轻是通过“采取行动”来缓解疼痛实现的,并不依赖于减少伤害性刺激。