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Quick Discrimination of Adelta and C Fiber Mediated Pain Based on Three Verbal Descriptors
Author(s) -
Florian Beißner,
Amadeus Brandau,
Christian Henke,
Lisa Felden,
Ulf Baumgärtner,
RolfDetlef Treede,
B. Oertel,
Jörn Lötsch
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0012944
Subject(s) - sensation , pain sensation , stimulus (psychology) , pressing , medicine , nociception , audiology , psychology , anesthesia , materials science , neuroscience , cognitive psychology , composite material , receptor
Background A δ and C fibers are the major pain-conducting nerve fibers, activate only partly the same brain areas, and are differently involved in pain syndromes. Whether a stimulus excites predominantly A δ or C fibers is a commonly asked question in basic pain research but a quick test was lacking so far. Methodology/Principal Findings Of 77 verbal descriptors of pain sensations, “pricking”, “dull” and “pressing” distinguished best (95% cases correctly) between A δ fiber mediated (punctate pressure produced by means of von Frey hairs) and C fiber mediated (blunt pressure) pain, applied to healthy volunteers in experiment 1. The sensation was assigned to A δ fibers when “pricking” but neither “dull” nor “pressing” were chosen, and to C fibers when the sum of the selections of “dull” or “pressing” was greater than that of the selection of “pricking”. In experiment 2, with an independent cohort, the three-descriptor questionnaire achieved sensitivity and specificity above 0.95 for distinguishing fiber preferential non-mechanical induced pain (laser heat, exciting A δ fibers, and 5-Hz electric stimulation, exciting C fibers). Conclusion A three-item verbal rating test using the words “pricking”, “dull”, and “pressing” may provide sufficient information to characterize a pain sensation evoked by a physical stimulus as transmitted via A δ or via C fibers. It meets the criteria of a screening test by being easy to administer, taking little time, being comfortable in handling, and inexpensive while providing high specificity for relevant information.

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