Zauberman Rachel B, Shamay-Tsoory Simone, Weissman-Fogel Irit
Physical Therapy Department, Faculty of Social Welfare & Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Eur J Pain. 2025 Jan;29(1):e4772. doi: 10.1002/ejp.4772.
Tactile-induced analgesia (TIA) is a phenomenon in which different types of tactile stimulation alleviate pain via different mechanisms including empathy. As TIA plays an essential role in therapeutic situations and clinical conditions, it is crucial to determine whether specific tactile stimulations confer distinct benefits.
Fifty-two subjects (31 females; 21-47 years) were exposed to four distinct experimental conditions involving three types of touch provided within a simulated supportive therapeutic setting. First, a contact heat (70 s) at a pain intensity of 60/100 Numerical Pain Scale (NPS) was applied to the forearm. The pain stimulus was then given simultaneously with vibration, gentle stroking, or handholding in random order. Pain ratings were reported at 5 and 65 s of each stimulation. Given the role of empathy in TIA, we also assessed the levels of empathy experienced by the subjects and the experimenter.
Handholding and vibration conditions were associated with a more rapid decrease in pain ratings compared to pain-alone (B values: handholding = -150.94 vs. pain-alone = -99.38, p = 0.01; vibration = -163.54 vs. pain-alone = -99.38, p < 0.001). Higher levels of the experimenter's empathy toward the subjects were associated with greater pain alleviation during vibration vs. pain-alone condition (B values: vibration = -56.42 vs. B pain-alone = -9.57, p = 0.04).
Vibration's potent analgesic effects may be attributed to its multi-channel analgesic mechanisms, including the therapist's empathy toward the participant. On the other hand, for handholding establishing an empathic interaction should be considered in a therapeutic setting to enhance its analgesic efficacy.
This article explores the effectiveness of touch-based pain relief methods and their association with empathetic therapeutic interactions. The study emphasizes the significance of positive therapeutic interactions in facilitating tactile-induced analgesia.
触觉诱导镇痛(TIA)是一种现象,其中不同类型的触觉刺激通过包括共情在内的不同机制减轻疼痛。由于TIA在治疗情况和临床病症中起着至关重要的作用,确定特定的触觉刺激是否具有独特的益处至关重要。
52名受试者(31名女性;21 - 47岁)暴露于四种不同的实验条件下,这些条件涉及在模拟支持性治疗环境中提供的三种触摸类型。首先,将疼痛强度为60/100数字疼痛量表(NPS)的接触热(70秒)施加于前臂。然后,疼痛刺激与振动、轻柔抚摸或手持以随机顺序同时给予。在每次刺激的5秒和65秒时报告疼痛评分。鉴于共情在TIA中的作用,我们还评估了受试者和实验者所体验到的共情水平。
与仅疼痛相比,手持和振动条件下疼痛评分下降更快(B值:手持 = -150.94,仅疼痛 = -99.38,p = 0.01;振动 = -163.54,仅疼痛 = -99.38,p < 0.001)。实验者对受试者的较高共情水平与振动与仅疼痛条件下更大程度的疼痛减轻相关(B值:振动 = -56.42,仅疼痛 = -9.57,p = 0.04)。
振动强大的镇痛作用可能归因于其多通道镇痛机制,包括治疗师对参与者的共情。另一方面,对于手持,在治疗环境中应考虑建立共情互动以提高其镇痛效果。
本文探讨了基于触摸的疼痛缓解方法的有效性及其与共情治疗互动的关联。该研究强调了积极治疗互动在促进触觉诱导镇痛中的重要性。