El-Sayed Rima, Fauchon Camille, Kim Junseok A, Firouzian Shahrzad, Osborne Natalie R, Besik Ariana, Mills Emily P, Bhatia Anuj, Davis Karen D
Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Krembil Brain Institute, Division of Brain, Imaging, and Behaviour, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2021 Dec 24;2:784362. doi: 10.3389/fpain.2021.784362. eCollection 2021.
Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) is a physiological measure thought to reflect an individual's endogenous pain modulation system. CPM varies across individuals and provides insight into chronic pain pathophysiology. There is growing evidence that CPM may help predict individual pain treatment outcome. However, paradigm variabilities and practical issues have impeded widespread clinical adoption of CPM assessment. This study aimed to compare two CPM paradigms in people with chronic pain and healthy individuals. A total of 30 individuals (12 chronic pain, 18 healthy) underwent two CPM paradigms. The heat CPM paradigm acquired pain intensity ratings evoked by a test stimulus (TS) applied before and during the conditioning stimulus (CS). The pressure CPM paradigm acquired continuous pain intensity ratings of a gradually increasing TS, before and during CS. Pain intensity was rated from 0 (no pain) to 100 (worst pain imaginable); Pain50 is the stimulus level for a response rated 50. Heat and pressure CPM were calculated as a change in TS pain intensity ratings at Pain50, where negative CPM scores indicate pain inhibition. We also determined CPM in the pressure paradigm as change in pressure pain detection threshold (PDT). We found that in healthy individuals the CPM effect was significantly more inhibitory using the pressure paradigm than the heat paradigm. The pressure CPM effect was also significantly more inhibitory when based on changes at Pain50 than at PDT. However, in individuals with chronic pain there was no significant difference in pressure CPM compared to heat or PDT CPM. There was no significant correlation between clinical pain measures (painDETECT and Brief Pain Inventory) and paradigm type (heat vs. pressure), although heat-based CPM and painDETECT scores showed a trend. Importantly, the pressure paradigm could be administered in less time than the heat paradigm. Thus, our study indicates that in healthy individuals, interpretation of CPM findings should consider potential modality-dependent effects. However, in individuals with chronic pain, either heat or pressure paradigms can similarly be used to assess CPM. Given the practical advantages of the pressure paradigm (e.g., short test time, ease of use), we propose this approach to be well-suited for clinical adoption.
条件性疼痛调制(CPM)是一种生理测量方法,被认为可反映个体的内源性疼痛调制系统。CPM因人而异,能为慢性疼痛的病理生理学提供见解。越来越多的证据表明,CPM可能有助于预测个体的疼痛治疗结果。然而,范式的变异性和实际问题阻碍了CPM评估在临床上的广泛应用。本研究旨在比较慢性疼痛患者和健康个体的两种CPM范式。共有30名个体(12名慢性疼痛患者,18名健康个体)接受了两种CPM范式。热CPM范式获取了在条件刺激(CS)之前和期间施加的测试刺激(TS)所诱发的疼痛强度评分。压力CPM范式获取了在CS之前和期间逐渐增加的TS的连续疼痛强度评分。疼痛强度从0(无疼痛)到100(可想象的最剧烈疼痛)进行评分;疼痛50是评分为50时的刺激水平。热CPM和压力CPM计算为在疼痛50时TS疼痛强度评分的变化,负的CPM分数表示疼痛抑制。我们还将压力范式中的CPM确定为压力疼痛检测阈值(PDT)的变化。我们发现,在健康个体中,使用压力范式时CPM效应的抑制作用明显大于热范式。基于疼痛50时的变化,压力CPM效应的抑制作用也明显大于基于PDT时的变化。然而,在慢性疼痛个体中,压力CPM与热CPM或PDT CPM相比没有显著差异。临床疼痛测量指标(疼痛DETECT和简明疼痛量表)与范式类型(热与压力)之间没有显著相关性,尽管基于热的CPM和疼痛DETECT评分呈现出一种趋势。重要的是,压力范式的实施时间比热范式短。因此,我们的研究表明,在健康个体中,对CPM结果的解释应考虑潜在的模态依赖性效应。然而,在慢性疼痛个体中,热范式或压力范式均可类似地用于评估CPM。鉴于压力范式的实际优势(如测试时间短、使用方便),我们建议这种方法非常适合临床应用。