Journal
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages 544-551Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpain.2007.08.010
Keywords
capsaicin; gut; experimental; pain; vaso-motor reflexes; human; thermography; laser doppler flowmetry
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The interaction between visceral pain and the sympathetic nervous system is only sparsely investigated in quantitative human studies. Referred visceral pain can be evoked experimentally by application of substances such as capsaicin (the pungent substance of chilli pepper) to the gut. The aim of the present study was to induce referred visceral pain from the small and large intestine in 32 volunteers via the stoma] opening in patients with ileo- or colostomy and quantify the viscero-somatic reflex responses in these referred pain areas by thermography and laser doppler flowmetry. Capsaicin evoked pain and referred pain areas in all subjects. In the referred pain area, the temperature increased by approximately 0.6 degrees C (P < 0.001) and the blood flow by approximately 35 AU (P < 0.001). Saline was used in a control experiment, and no temperature and blood flow changes were found. The present quantitative human study of viscero-somatic reflexes showed dramatic sympathetic responses in the referred pain areas after experimentally induced gut pain. (C) 2007 European Federation of Chapters of the International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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