Institute of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy, Pain and Exercise Research Luebeck (P.E.R.L.), Universität zu Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany; Center of Brain, Behavior and Metabolism (CBBM), Universität zu Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.
Laboratory of Pain Research, Institute of Physiotherapy and Health Sciences, The Jerzy Kukuczka Academy of Physical Education, Katowice, Poland.
J Bodyw Mov Ther. 2024 Apr;38:73-80. doi: 10.1016/j.jbmt.2023.12.005. Epub 2023 Dec 28.
Myofascial trigger point therapy (MTrP) is a widely used therapeutic approach, although the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Mechanisms discussed include peripheral involvement of muscles as well as central pain modulating processes such as the conditioned pain modulation (CPM). The aim of this study was to investigate whether the analgesic response of MTrP and the analgesic response of CPM correlate in asymptomatic participants in order to identify shared underlying mechanisms of MTrP and CPM.
Both, CPM and MTrP protocols consisted of heat-based test stimuli (heat pain thresholds before and after the intervention) and pressure-based (conditioning) stimuli. Asymptomatic participants (n = 94) were randomly assigned to receive either mild, intense or no pressure stimuli (between-group design) to both the fingernail and the MTrP of the infraspinatus muscle (within-group design). Pressure stimuli at both locations (fingernail, MTrP) were applied with a pressure algometer for 120 s and continuously adjusted to maintain a constant pain intensity of mild or intense pain. All thermal stimuli were applied on the lower leg with a thermal stimulator.
A significant correlation was shown between the analgesic effect of CPM and MTrP therapy for mild (r = 0.53, p = 0.002) and intensive stimuli (r = 0.73, p < 0.001). 17.3% of the variance of the MTrP effect were explained by CPM after mild stimulation, and 47.1% after intense stimulation. Pain-related characteristics did not explain the variance within the analgesic response using a regression analysis.
Between the analgesic responses following MTrP and CPM paradigms, a moderate to strong correlation was observed, suggesting shared underlying mechanisms.
肌筋膜触发点疗法(MTrP)是一种广泛应用的治疗方法,但其潜在机制仍不清楚。讨论的机制包括肌肉的外周参与以及中央疼痛调节过程,如条件疼痛调制(CPM)。本研究旨在探讨无症状参与者中 MTrP 的镇痛反应与 CPM 的镇痛反应是否相关,以确定 MTrP 和 CPM 的潜在机制是否存在共享。
CPM 和 MTrP 方案均包括基于热的测试刺激(干预前后的热痛阈值)和基于压力的(条件)刺激。无症状参与者(n=94)被随机分配接受指甲和肩胛下肌 MTrP 的轻度、强度或无压力刺激(组间设计)(组内设计)。在两个位置(指甲、MTrP)用压力测痛计施加压力刺激 120 秒,并持续调整以保持轻度或强度疼痛的恒定疼痛强度。所有热刺激均用热刺激器施加于小腿上。
CPM 的镇痛效果与 MTrP 治疗的镇痛效果之间显示出显著相关性,无论是轻度(r=0.53,p=0.002)还是强度刺激(r=0.73,p<0.001)。轻度刺激后,CPM 解释了 MTrP 效应的 17.3%的方差,而强烈刺激后则解释了 47.1%的方差。回归分析表明,疼痛相关特征不能解释镇痛反应中的差异。
在 MTrP 和 CPM 范式之后的镇痛反应之间观察到中度到强的相关性,表明存在共同的潜在机制。