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1.
J Pain ; 14(3): 281-9, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23380268

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: The knee osteoarthritis (KOA) model is a convenient and coherent archetype that is frequently used in pharmaceutical trials of drugs with analgesic and/or anti-inflammatory properties; yet, little is known about its specific pathophysiology. The presumed chronic inflammatory etiology of osteoarthritis suggests that nociceptive processes and neurogenic inflammation predominate in this condition. However, most chronic pain conditions are associated with changes in peripheral and central processing. Recent data corroborate this as an important mechanism in KOA. We compared psychophysical characteristics (including thermal Quantitative Sensory Testing); thermal, mechanical, and functional wind-up; thermal and mechanical aftersensations; and pressure algometry of 37 subjects with KOA with 35 age- and sex-matched controls. A third of the KOA subjects demonstrated hypoesthesia to vibration and the 4.56 von Frey fiber, yet few showed allodynia in their worse knee. The majority of subjects had abnormalities to pinprick (41% were hyperalgesic and 27% were hypoesthetic). Compared to controls, the more painful knee was hypoesthetic to cold detection and had greater thermal wind-up, lower pressure-pain thresholds, thermal and mechanical aftersensations, and twice the pain ratings of controls after stair climb. Substantial intraindividual differences were found in KOA subjects and controls for mechanical wind-up and algometric thresholds. PERSPECTIVE: These results develop the KOA model and suggest mechanistic hypotheses. Certain of these tests may ultimately prove to be responsive, quasi-objective, and quantitative outcomes for research and lend empirical support to the notion of measurable sensitization in osteoarthritis.


Subject(s)
Osteoarthritis, Knee/complications , Osteoarthritis, Knee/psychology , Pain/psychology , Aged , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Hyperalgesia , Male , Middle Aged , Pain Measurement , Pain Threshold , Physical Stimulation/adverse effects , Psychological Tests , Reaction Time
2.
PM R ; 2(7): 607-11, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20659715

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To test the emerging hypothesis that there is polymodal fiber degeneration/loss in distal residual limbs (DRL) of amputees. DESIGN: Prospective qualitative and quantitative psychophysical testing. SETTING: A pain research center at an urban academic rehabilitation hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Forty-four amputees (32 with pain, 12 without pain) with a single (upper or lower) limb amputation. Subjects are a clinical "convenience" sample derived from our amputee or prosthetic clinics. METHODS: Interventions were prospectively acquired psychophysical tests. The primary quantitative test was thermal Quantitative Sensory Testing (tQST) using a Peltier type thermal testing device, assessing sites on the DRL compared with anatomically similar regions on the contralateral "unaffected" extremity. RESULTS: Perceptual responses for several qualitative psychophysical stimuli and perceptual thresholds for tQST cold sensation were significantly reduced in the DRL (t(43)=-2.613, P=.012). There were no significant tQST differences in thresholds for warm perception, cold pain, or hot pain (P>.05). CONCLUSION: These results show a point prevalence of differential hypoesthesia in distal residual limbs. There was a selective loss of cold, but not warm perception or threshold for hot or cold pain by tQST. There are several possible explanations for this polymodal and selective hypoesthesia; specifically, these data may be indicative of a differential "dying back" peripheral neuropathy of the DRL, which may be operational in such clinical features as postamputation pain.


Subject(s)
Hypesthesia/physiopathology , Pain Threshold , Phantom Limb/physiopathology , Touch , Adult , Aged , Amputees , Differential Threshold/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Pain Threshold/physiology , Prospective Studies , Temperature , Touch/physiology , Vibration
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