4.4 Article

Pain quality patterns in delayed onset muscle soreness of the lower back suggest sensitization of fascia rather than muscle afferents: a secondary analysis study

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SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00424-023-02896-8

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Delayed onset muscle soreness; Eccentric exercise; Pain quality; Pain perception; Muscle pain; Fascia pain; Thoracolumbar fascia; Lumbar multifidus muscle

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This study aimed to analyze the pain origin of delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) in the lower back. The findings revealed that the sensory characteristics of DOMS were similar to electrical stimulation but significantly different from muscle pain, suggesting that DOMS may have a fascial rather than muscular origin.
Delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) of the lower back is considered a surrogate for acute low back pain (aLBP) in experimental studies. Of note, it is often unquestioningly assumed to be muscle pain. To date, there has not been a study analyzing lumbar DOMS in terms of its pain origin, which was the aim of this study. Sixteen healthy individuals (L-DOMS) were enrolled for the present study and matched to participants from a previous study (n = 16, L-PAIN) who had undergone selective electrical stimulation of the thoracolumbar fascia and the multifidus muscle. DOMS was induced in the lower back of the L-DOMS group using eccentric trunk extensions performed until exhaustion. On subsequent days, pain on palpation (100-mm analogue scale), pressure pain threshold (PPT), and the Pain Sensation Scale (SES) were used to examine the sensory characteristics of DOMS. Pain on palpation showed a significant increase 24 and 48 h after eccentric training, whereas PPT was not affected (p > 0.05). Factor analysis of L-DOMS and L-PAIN sensory descriptors (SES) yielded a stable three-factor solution distinguishing superficial thermal (heat pain ) from superficial mechanical pain (sharp pain) and deep pain. Heat pain and deep pain in L-DOMS were almost identical to sensory descriptors from electrical stimulation of fascial tissue (L-PAIN, all p > 0.679) but significantly different from muscle pain (all p < 0.029). The differences in sensory description patterns as well as in PPT and self-reported DOMS for palpation pain scores suggest that DOMS has a fascial rather than a muscular origin.

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