2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.pain.2007.04.010
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Negative affect, pain and sex: The role of endogenous opioids

Abstract: Opioid neurotransmission modulates pain and negative affect during psychological stress.To determine whether these effects differ between men and women, the opioid receptor antagonist naltrexone or placebo was administered double-blind to 21 men and 22 women before they completed 30 minutes of difficult mental arithmetic. To heighten negative affect, participants received seven moderately noxious electric shocks during the math task, which were believed to be contingent upon performance. Before and after the m… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(41 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…In healthy controls, each of the tasks employed in the present study was found to suppress an experimental source of pain [17,18]. Thus, the present findings imply failure of stress-related pain modulation processes in fibromyalgia, and also in distressed patients with rheumatoid arthritis.…”
Section: Disruption Of Central Pain Modulation Processessupporting
confidence: 52%
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“…In healthy controls, each of the tasks employed in the present study was found to suppress an experimental source of pain [17,18]. Thus, the present findings imply failure of stress-related pain modulation processes in fibromyalgia, and also in distressed patients with rheumatoid arthritis.…”
Section: Disruption Of Central Pain Modulation Processessupporting
confidence: 52%
“…Two minutes later, participants were asked to rate pain intensity and then began to solve computer-generated additions and subtractions presented on a computer screen [18]. Participants were given up to 5 s to answer easy problems (e.g., 6 + 8 -2) and up to 11 s to answer hard problems (e.g., 116 + 138 -12) before the next was presented.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Addition and subtraction items varied across five levels of difficulty, and the difficulty of the problems was adjusted automatically to ensure a 75% failure rate across the 25 minutes of the task [20]. At the outset of the task subjects were told that the number of shocks that they would receive would depend on their performance.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In human research, µ-opioid receptor blockade antagonized stress-induced analgesia evoked by noxious electric shocks [47,48], immersion of a limb in ice-water [28,40], the perception of failure on a difficult cognitive task [2,3,20], a combat video shown to Vietnam veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder [38], and a first-time parachute jump [27]. Effects of µ-opioid receptor blockade on experimental pain are more variable [16,23,40], possibly because of individual differences in sensitivity to or release of opioid peptides.…”
Section: Stress-induced Analgesiamentioning
confidence: 99%