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Human Experimental Pain Models
Author Bios
Learning Objectives
Clinical Significance and Phenomenology
Complex Diseases: Need to Simplify
Model Requirements
Currently selected section: Brief and Sustained Experimental Pain
Choice of the Pain Stimulus
A Model Design for Pain Experimentation
Experiential Adjustment
Choice of Stimulation Site
Stimulation Site for a Study of TMJD
Experimental Design
Model Validation: Level 1
Model Validation: Level 2
Model Validation: Level 3
Model Validation: An Example
Cross-Validation with Other Model Systems
Model Systems as Tools
Sample Size Estimation
Potential Difficulties
Conclusion

 

Chapter 21: Human Experimental Pain Models: Brief and Sustained Experimental Pain
        

With this background in mind, studies of the "normal warning" response to brief pain may be less relevant than is often assumed to research on persistent pain. Researchers should understand the strong evidence supporting a differential information processing of sensory vs. affective information pain. Neuro-anatomical data suggest such differential processing occurs via distinct thalamic and suprathalamic brain structures which allow for several dimensions of the pain experience (Price, 2000). Experimental evidence linking frontal lobe limbic activity with pain affect in humans comes from a study using positron emission tomography (PET). Unlike the primary somatosensory cortex, significant changes in pain-evoked activity within the anterior cingulate cortex are observed during hypnotic suggestions that alter selectively the unpleasantness of noxious stimuli without changing their perceived intensity (Rainville, Duncan et al., 1997).

Patients' perception of brief pain is typically captured by sensory descriptors (e.g. aching, throbbing, radiating). In contrast, prolonged and sustained pain stimuli induce significant pain affect, which in itself constitutes an integral and meaningful part of the experience of pain in a clinical context (Stohler and Kowalski, 1999). Pain affect is expressed by descriptors, such as tiring, exhausting, frightening, and fearful (Melzack, 1975).

Table 5.1: Duration of Pain and Pain Affect
Temporal Pain Affect
Brief or initial experimental painMinimal
Sustained experimental pain > 10 minSignificant
Persistent clinical painSignificant
Note: Brief refers to pain of short duration, initial refers to the early part of pain that will proceed to sustained pain

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