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4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?

OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Experimental pain testing is used to identify changes in nociceptive processing and outcomes with intervention. This study investigated exercise induced changes in experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity after an acute bout of exercise in participants with fibromyalgia....

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Autores principales: Berardi, Giovanni, Ptizen, Grace, DellaIacono, Matthew, Bement, Marie Hoeger
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8823047/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2020.294
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author Berardi, Giovanni
Ptizen, Grace
DellaIacono, Matthew
Bement, Marie Hoeger
author_facet Berardi, Giovanni
Ptizen, Grace
DellaIacono, Matthew
Bement, Marie Hoeger
author_sort Berardi, Giovanni
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Experimental pain testing is used to identify changes in nociceptive processing and outcomes with intervention. This study investigated exercise induced changes in experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity after an acute bout of exercise in participants with fibromyalgia. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Ten females with fibromyalgia (55±10yr) were familiarized to study procedures and underwent submaximal (20% maximal voluntary contraction) intermittent eccentric muscle contractions isolated to the right arm for 10-minutes. Self-reported pain intensity (0-10 numerical pain rating scale [NPRS]) of the exercising arm was measured before, during, and after exercise; whole-body pain intensity was measured before and after exercise. Experimental pain testing included measurement of pressure pain thresholds (kPa [PPTs]); temporal summation (TS) of pressure pain with a constant mechanical pressure; and TS of punctate pressure with repeated application of monofilaments before and after exercise. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Participants reported minimal to moderate arm pain (3.1±2.1) during exercise. Following exercise, arm pain and whole-body pain significantly increased (3.1±2.2 and 1.6±0.5, respectively) [p<0.05]. No change occurred with PPTs at the bicep (138.9±49.5 to 142.8±55.3), PPTs at the quad (212.0±105.4 to 228.1±100.0), TS of mechanical pressure pain (7.6±2.1 to 7.9±1.5), TS of punctate pressure pain at the bicep (2.6±1.7 to 3.0±1.5), and TS of punctate pressure pain at the quad (3.6±1.5 to 3.7±1.4) before to after exercise respectively [p>0.05]. The change in self-reported arm and whole-body pain did not correlate with the change in experimental pain testing. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: In people with fibromyalgia, there is no relation between self-reported clinical pain and experimental pain following a single exercise session. Further research should identify the influence of exercise training on pain perception and if experimental pain testing translates to clinical insight.
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spelling pubmed-88230472022-02-18 4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes? Berardi, Giovanni Ptizen, Grace DellaIacono, Matthew Bement, Marie Hoeger J Clin Transl Sci Mechanistic Basic to Clinical OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Experimental pain testing is used to identify changes in nociceptive processing and outcomes with intervention. This study investigated exercise induced changes in experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity after an acute bout of exercise in participants with fibromyalgia. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Ten females with fibromyalgia (55±10yr) were familiarized to study procedures and underwent submaximal (20% maximal voluntary contraction) intermittent eccentric muscle contractions isolated to the right arm for 10-minutes. Self-reported pain intensity (0-10 numerical pain rating scale [NPRS]) of the exercising arm was measured before, during, and after exercise; whole-body pain intensity was measured before and after exercise. Experimental pain testing included measurement of pressure pain thresholds (kPa [PPTs]); temporal summation (TS) of pressure pain with a constant mechanical pressure; and TS of punctate pressure with repeated application of monofilaments before and after exercise. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Participants reported minimal to moderate arm pain (3.1±2.1) during exercise. Following exercise, arm pain and whole-body pain significantly increased (3.1±2.2 and 1.6±0.5, respectively) [p<0.05]. No change occurred with PPTs at the bicep (138.9±49.5 to 142.8±55.3), PPTs at the quad (212.0±105.4 to 228.1±100.0), TS of mechanical pressure pain (7.6±2.1 to 7.9±1.5), TS of punctate pressure pain at the bicep (2.6±1.7 to 3.0±1.5), and TS of punctate pressure pain at the quad (3.6±1.5 to 3.7±1.4) before to after exercise respectively [p>0.05]. The change in self-reported arm and whole-body pain did not correlate with the change in experimental pain testing. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: In people with fibromyalgia, there is no relation between self-reported clinical pain and experimental pain following a single exercise session. Further research should identify the influence of exercise training on pain perception and if experimental pain testing translates to clinical insight. Cambridge University Press 2020-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8823047/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2020.294 Text en © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2020 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Mechanistic Basic to Clinical
Berardi, Giovanni
Ptizen, Grace
DellaIacono, Matthew
Bement, Marie Hoeger
4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
title 4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
title_full 4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
title_fullStr 4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
title_full_unstemmed 4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
title_short 4095 Concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
title_sort 4095 concurrent assessment of experimental pain and self-reported pain intensity with acute exercise intervention in fibromyalgia; clarifying or obscuring clinical outcomes?
topic Mechanistic Basic to Clinical
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8823047/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2020.294
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