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Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?

One common feature of chronic musculoskeletal pain and headaches are that they are both influenced by stress. Among these, tension-type headache (TTH), fibromyalgia (FMS) and chronic shoulder/neck pain (SNP) appear to have several similarities, both with regard to pathophysiology, clinical features...

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Autores principales: Leistad, Rune Bang, Nilsen, Kristian Bernhard, Stovner, Lars Jacob, Westgaard, Rolf Harald, Rø, Magne, Sand, Trond
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Milan 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3476196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18373156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0029-7
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author Leistad, Rune Bang
Nilsen, Kristian Bernhard
Stovner, Lars Jacob
Westgaard, Rolf Harald
Rø, Magne
Sand, Trond
author_facet Leistad, Rune Bang
Nilsen, Kristian Bernhard
Stovner, Lars Jacob
Westgaard, Rolf Harald
Rø, Magne
Sand, Trond
author_sort Leistad, Rune Bang
collection PubMed
description One common feature of chronic musculoskeletal pain and headaches are that they are both influenced by stress. Among these, tension-type headache (TTH), fibromyalgia (FMS) and chronic shoulder/neck pain (SNP) appear to have several similarities, both with regard to pathophysiology, clinical features and demographics. The main hypothesis of the present study was that patients with chronic pain (TTH, FMS and SNP) had stress-induced features distinguishing them from migraine patients and healthy controls. We measured pain, blood pressure, heart rate (HR) and skin blood flow (BF) during (1 h) and after (30 min) controlled low-grade cognitive stressor in 22 migraine patients, 18 TTH patients, 23 FMS patients, 29 SNP patients and 44 healthy controls. FMS patients had a lower early HR response to stress than migraine patients, but no differences were found among FMS, TTH and SNP patients. Finger skin BF decreased more in FMS patients compared to migraine patients, both during and after the test. When comparing chronic pain patients (chronic TTH, FMS and SNP) with those with episodic pain (episodic TTH and migraine patients) or little or no pain (healthy controls), different adaptation profiles were found during the test for systolic and diastolic blood pressure, HR and skin BF in the chronic group. In conclusion, these results suggest that TTH, FMS and SNP patients may share common pathophysiological mechanisms regarding the physiological responses to and recovery from low-grade cognitive stress, differentiating them from episodic pain conditions such as migraine
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spelling pubmed-34761962012-11-29 Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism? Leistad, Rune Bang Nilsen, Kristian Bernhard Stovner, Lars Jacob Westgaard, Rolf Harald Rø, Magne Sand, Trond J Headache Pain Original One common feature of chronic musculoskeletal pain and headaches are that they are both influenced by stress. Among these, tension-type headache (TTH), fibromyalgia (FMS) and chronic shoulder/neck pain (SNP) appear to have several similarities, both with regard to pathophysiology, clinical features and demographics. The main hypothesis of the present study was that patients with chronic pain (TTH, FMS and SNP) had stress-induced features distinguishing them from migraine patients and healthy controls. We measured pain, blood pressure, heart rate (HR) and skin blood flow (BF) during (1 h) and after (30 min) controlled low-grade cognitive stressor in 22 migraine patients, 18 TTH patients, 23 FMS patients, 29 SNP patients and 44 healthy controls. FMS patients had a lower early HR response to stress than migraine patients, but no differences were found among FMS, TTH and SNP patients. Finger skin BF decreased more in FMS patients compared to migraine patients, both during and after the test. When comparing chronic pain patients (chronic TTH, FMS and SNP) with those with episodic pain (episodic TTH and migraine patients) or little or no pain (healthy controls), different adaptation profiles were found during the test for systolic and diastolic blood pressure, HR and skin BF in the chronic group. In conclusion, these results suggest that TTH, FMS and SNP patients may share common pathophysiological mechanisms regarding the physiological responses to and recovery from low-grade cognitive stress, differentiating them from episodic pain conditions such as migraine Springer Milan 2008-03-29 2008-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3476196/ /pubmed/18373156 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0029-7 Text en © Springer-Verlag 2008
spellingShingle Original
Leistad, Rune Bang
Nilsen, Kristian Bernhard
Stovner, Lars Jacob
Westgaard, Rolf Harald
Rø, Magne
Sand, Trond
Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
title Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
title_full Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
title_fullStr Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
title_full_unstemmed Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
title_short Similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
title_sort similarities in stress physiology among patients with chronic pain and headache disorders: evidence for a common pathophysiological mechanism?
topic Original
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3476196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18373156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0029-7
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