Guasti L, Merlo B, Verga R, Cattaneo R, Gaudio G, Bianchi L, Zanzi P, Grandi A M, Bossi P M, Venco A
Department of Internal Medicine, Second Faculty of Medicine at Varese, University of Pavia, Italy.
J Hypertens. 1995 Dec;13(12 Pt 2):1631-5.
Though hypertension-related hypalgesia has been described, little is known about possible variation of pain perception after mental stress. The aims of the present study were to determine (1) whether mental stress can influence pain perception in normotensive and hypertensive subjects and (2) whether blood pressure levels before pain evaluation can account for changes in pain sensitivity.
A pulpar test (graded increase in test current of 0-0.03 mA applied on healthy teeth) was performed twice (time interval 15 min) in 62 subjects. Thirty-eight subjects (group 1) performed an arithmetic mental stress test immediately after the first pulpar test while 24 subjects (group 2) did not. The pain threshold (occurrence of pulp sensation) was evaluated as the mean value of three teeth tested on each subject and as the value on the most sensitive tooth.
Twenty-eight subjects with normal 24-h blood pressure showed a lower mean pain threshold than 34 subjects with high 24-h blood pressure values (P<0.02). In group 1 (20 normotensives, 18 hypertensives), even when the mental stress increased the pretest blood pressure, the pressure values immediately before both pulpar tests remained similar. In the second pulpar test, a significant increase in the pain threshold on the most sensitive tooth was observed in group 1 (P<0.005). Though a trend towards an increase in the pain threshold was found in both the subgroups of normotensive and hypertensive subjects, the difference was significant in hypertensives only. However, group 2 subjects showed unchanged pain sensitivity on the second test.
A mental stress-induced reduction in pain sensitivity was observed in the absence of change in arterial pressure measured immediately before pulpar tests. A blood pressure increase during the test and, more likely, cortical and humoral activation during stress, may account for the variation found in pain perception.
尽管已经描述了与高血压相关的痛觉减退,但对于精神压力后疼痛感知的可能变化知之甚少。本研究的目的是确定:(1)精神压力是否会影响血压正常和高血压受试者的疼痛感知;(2)疼痛评估前的血压水平是否可以解释疼痛敏感性的变化。
对62名受试者进行了两次牙髓测试(在健康牙齿上施加0 - 0.03 mA的测试电流分级增加)(时间间隔15分钟)。38名受试者(第1组)在第一次牙髓测试后立即进行算术精神压力测试,而24名受试者(第2组)未进行。疼痛阈值(牙髓感觉的出现)被评估为每个受试者测试的三颗牙齿的平均值以及最敏感牙齿上的值。
28名24小时血压正常的受试者的平均疼痛阈值低于34名24小时血压高的受试者(P<0.02)。在第1组(20名血压正常者,18名高血压患者)中,即使精神压力使测试前血压升高,两次牙髓测试前的血压值仍保持相似。在第二次牙髓测试中,第1组中最敏感牙齿的疼痛阈值显著增加(P<0.005)。尽管在血压正常和高血压受试者的两个亚组中都发现了疼痛阈值增加的趋势,但仅在高血压患者中差异显著。然而,第2组受试者在第二次测试中疼痛敏感性未改变。
在牙髓测试前立即测量的动脉压没有变化的情况下,观察到精神压力引起的疼痛敏感性降低。测试期间的血压升高,更可能是压力期间的皮质和体液激活,可能解释了疼痛感知中发现的变化。