Measurement of thresholds for heat-induced pain was performed on 106 normal subjects, at thenar eminence and foot dorsum, using the reaction time-inclusive method of limits. Tests were repeated 2 weeks following the first test for most of the subjects. After determination that there were no outlying data points and that there was no systematic relationship between magnitude and variability of test scores, data from between 72 and 76 subjects were used to define normal upper and lower ranges by age, as well as repeatability coefficients. This was done through ANOVA-based procedures that extend standard repeatability assessment methods. Normative data tables are presented, with measures of repeatability for the various sites and modalities. For the conventional test range, reaching 55 degrees C, measurement of heat pain thresholds can define both hyper- and hypoalgesia. Application of repeatability coefficients allows for intra-individual inter-session comparison in longitudinal studies.
Background and Purpose Recently, supraventricular tachycardia has been reported following right hemisphere stroke, suggesting a reduction in parasympathetic cardiac innervation after stroke of the right hemisphere. We performed power spectrum analysis of fluctuations in RR interval duration in the electrocardiogram in an attempt to determine how ischemic stroke influences autonomic cardiac innervation.Methods Power spectrum analysis of the variation in 256 consecutive electrocardiographic RR intervals was performed using the fast-Fourier transformation. The area under the spectral curve from 0 to 0.5 Hz and the area under that portion of the curve produced by parasympathetically mediated respiratory variations were determined in 20 patients with righthemisphere and 20 patients with left-hemisphere ischemic stroke confirmed by computerized tomography. Data were compared with 40 age-and sex-matched healthy controls.
Experimental heat pain transients were administered to 30 normal volunteers over four weekly sessions, measuring both heat pain (HP) threshold and suprathreshold magnitude estimation through VAS. Repeatability and bias for these two factors were evaluated. Heat pain thresholds measured through the method of limits were previously shown to have inter-session bias, presumably due to a practice effect. Existence of such a bias between first and second measurement sessions casts doubt on the usefulness of this parameter for pain assessment of individuals over time. In the present study, measurements of normal HP thresholds over four sessions showed that bias exists between the first and successive sessions, but not among sessions other than the first. It is concluded that (i) HP thresholds obtained from a single session are of limited value, and should be carefully interpreted. (ii) Long-term studies that use the HP threshold should take results from the second (or later) session as their baseline. The Visual Analog Scale (VAS) is considered the 'gold standard' for assessment of clinical and suprathreshold experimental pain, and changes in VAS score are regarded as significant evidence of individual response to treatment, placebo, or experimental manipulation. Although its overall group accuracy and precision have been examined for both clinical and experimental pain, and found adequate (Price 1988), the VAS has not been rigorously assessed for repeatability. Stimuli at three pain levels, 1.5, 3 and 4.5 degrees C above each individual's heat pain threshold as determined at each session, were given. Several models of analysis of the VAS were tested and repeatabilities (r) obtained from these analyses demonstrate poor precision for each of the tested analysis models. For example, inter-session repeatabilities for the three individual pain levels ranged from r = 3.8-4.7, effectively providing a confidence interval of 7.6-9.4 for any VAS reading on a 0- to 10-point scale. An examination of intra-session VAS provided somewhat better results. Thus, use of the VAS in similar experimental settings is called into question. The use of the VAS in clinical settings, where individual assessments are necessary, is also called into question, but remains to be specifically tested.
Pain evoked potentials (EPs) have been used in the last two decades as means of obtaining objective measures of pain, in clinical and experimental setups. The possibility that the pain EP wave contains elements of the endogenous P300 potential rather than being a neurophysiological correlate of pain has been raised by a number of authors, but the issue has not been resolved. In this study, two experiments were performed to study the effect of nonmodality-specific factors on the laser EP: (1) a stimulus attend as opposed to a stimulus-ignore condition and (2) counterbalanced oddball and task P300 stimulus presentations. The latter was to permit full examination of the separate and combined influences of each condition on the EP. Stimuli were given to the radial hand of 10 healthy volunteers using a CO2 laser. The positive component of the laser EP was affected by both manipulations relating to (1) attention (P = 0.0146) and (2) the frequency condition (P = 0.003) in the P300 paradigm. The task condition in the second paradigm did not affect the positive wave on its own, although its effect was visible in interaction with frequency (P = 0.033). In conclusion, although the presence of a somatic component in the laser EP cannot be rules out, we suggest that the laser EP contains a definite non-modality-specific P300 component, and is not a pure neurophysiological correlate of pain intensity.
Sensory aspects of uremic neuropathy were studied in 36 patients using clinical assessment and quantitative sensory tests (QST). The outstanding abnormality in sensory quality was perception of heat in response to low temperature stimuli. This paradoxical heat sensation was found in the foot in 42% (15) of patients, far beyond the normal prevalence of 10%. Paradoxical sensation was positively related to cold hypoesthesia (P = 0.0004) suggesting disinhibition as a possible mechanism. Paradoxical heat sensation also positively related to creatinine level (P = 0.0012). Pruritus was present in 20 patients (56%), intensity not related to any biochemical or clinical parameter. Signs of sensory polyneuropathy (PNP), based on at least two abnormal parameters in the clinical assessment or QST, were found in 39% of patients (14), of whom 11 had paradoxical heat sensation. Thus, in 4 patients (11%), this sensory aberration preceded other signs for PNP. Paradoxical heat sensation seems to be a common and often early expression of the sensory neuropathy in uremia.
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