Relationships between Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pain, Skin Temperature Indices of Autonomic Dysregulation, and Sensitivity to Thermal Cutaneous Stimulation

Joint Authors

Wong, Fong
Riley, Joseph L.
Schmidt, Siegfried
King, Christopher D.
Rodrigues, Anthony C.
Mauderli, Andre P.
Vierck, Charles J.

Source

Pain Research and Treatment

Issue

Vol. 2010, Issue 2010 (31 Dec. 2010), pp.1-7, 7 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2010-08-09

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

7

Main Subjects

Diseases
Medicine

Abstract EN

This study evaluated relationships between irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) pain, sympathetic dysregulation, and thermal pain sensitivity.

Eight female patients with diarrhea-predominant IBS and ten healthy female controls were tested for sensitivity to thermal stimulation of the left palm.

A new method of response-dependent thermal stimulation was used to maintain pain intensity at a predetermined level (35%) by adjusting thermal stimulus intensity as a function of pain ratings.

Clinical pain levels were assessed prior to each testing session.

Skin temperatures were recorded before and after pain sensitivity testing.

The temperature of palmar skin dropped (1.5∘C) when the corresponding location on the opposite hand of control subjects was subjected to prolonged thermal stimulation, but this response was absent for IBS pain patients.

The patients also required significantly lower stimulus temperatures than controls to maintain a 35% pain rating.

Baseline skin temperatures of patients were significantly correlated with thermode temperatures required to maintain 35% pain ratings.

IBS pain intensity was not significantly correlated with skin temperature or pain sensitivity.

The method of response-dependent stimulation revealed thermal hyperalgesia and increased sympathetic tone for chronic pain patients, relative to controls.

Similarly, a significant correlation between resting skin temperatures and thermal pain sensitivity for IBS but not control subjects indicates that tonic sympathetic activation and a thermal hyperalgesia were generated by the chronic presence of visceral pain.

However, lack of a significant relationship between sympathetic tone and ratings of IBS pain casts doubt on propositions that the magnitude of IBS pain is determined by psychological stress.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Wong, Fong& Rodrigues, Anthony C.& King, Christopher D.& Riley, Joseph L.& Schmidt, Siegfried& Vierck, Charles J.…[et al.]. 2010. Relationships between Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pain, Skin Temperature Indices of Autonomic Dysregulation, and Sensitivity to Thermal Cutaneous Stimulation. Pain Research and Treatment،Vol. 2010, no. 2010, pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-510625

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Wong, Fong…[et al.]. Relationships between Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pain, Skin Temperature Indices of Autonomic Dysregulation, and Sensitivity to Thermal Cutaneous Stimulation. Pain Research and Treatment No. 2010 (2010), pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-510625

American Medical Association (AMA)

Wong, Fong& Rodrigues, Anthony C.& King, Christopher D.& Riley, Joseph L.& Schmidt, Siegfried& Vierck, Charles J.…[et al.]. Relationships between Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pain, Skin Temperature Indices of Autonomic Dysregulation, and Sensitivity to Thermal Cutaneous Stimulation. Pain Research and Treatment. 2010. Vol. 2010, no. 2010, pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-510625

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-510625