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Spatial and temporal summation of pain evoked by mechanical pressure stimulation
Author(s) -
Nie HongLing,
GravenNielsen Thomas,
ArendtNielsen Lars
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
european journal of pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.305
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1532-2149
pISSN - 1090-3801
DOI - 10.1016/j.ejpain.2008.07.013
Subject(s) - summation , stimulus (psychology) , stimulation , anesthesia , medicine , audiology , psychology , psychotherapist
Chronic pain patients often suffer from widespread and long lasting pain. The integrative effect of combined spatial and temporal summation on pain intensity has not been quantitatively tested. The present study was designed to investigate: (1) if the size of the stimulation area would facilitate the temporal summation of pain to repetitive pressure stimulation, and (2) if temporal summation is effective when stimulating separated sites, repetitively. Twenty healthy male subjects participated in this study. The test sites were located on the bilateral upper trapezius and tibialis anterior muscles. The ten stimuli (each with a duration of 1s) were applied to a single site at three inter‐stimulus intervals (ISI: 1, 5, 30s) using five different probe sizes (0.5, 1, 2, 4 and 8cm 2 ). The stimulation intensity was equal to the pressure pain threshold (PPT) determined for each probe size. Similar repetitive stimulations at two inter‐stimulus intervals (5s and 30s) using two sizes of probes (0.5cm 2 and 2cm 2 ) were applied to ten separate sites. The PPT at the trapezius muscle decreased significantly with the increase in stimulus area from 0.5cm 2 to 8cm 2 ( P <0.001) due to spatial summation. Temporal summation of pain was evoked by repetitive pressure stimuli on the same site for all ISI and was more pronounced at 5s and 30s ISI with larger probe areas (2, 4, and 8cm 2 ) compared to smaller probe areas. There was no temporal summation of pain to stimuli with ISI 5 and 30s when stimulating the separated sites. The current study indicated that spatial summation facilitated the temporal summation of pain for stimuli given at 5s and 30s ISI. The combination of temporal and spatial integration of nociceptive input facilitates the pain intensity, suggesting that temporal summation is clinically relevant in conditions with widespread pain.