Title of article :
The second exteroceptive suppression is affected by psychophysiological factors
Author/Authors :
Forkmann، نويسنده , , Thomas and Heins، نويسنده , , Marco and Bruns، نويسنده , , Timon and Paulus، نويسنده , , Walter and Krِner-Herwig، نويسنده , , Birgit، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
9
From page :
521
To page :
529
Abstract :
Objective cond exteroceptive suppression (ES2) is assumed to be an indicator of central antinociceptive processing, although some conflicting data have been produced. We examined the impact of experimentally induced psychophysiological conditions on the latency and duration of the ES2. Also, the association to the subjective evaluation of the painful electrical stimulation by which the ES2 is elicited was studied. s s assessed in 46 healthy volunteers running through four experimentally induced psychophysiological conditions: stress, relaxation, depressed mood, and heterotopic pressure pain. Conditions were presented in a repeated measure design in permuted sequences. Ten stimulation-recording sequences per condition were averaged. ES2 parameters were compared to a baseline condition and correlated to subjective pain perception. s ration was found to be prolonged and ES2 latency to be shortened under the impact of relaxation and depressed mood. The subjective perception of the painful electrical stimulation was affected by the experimental conditions. sion end support to the hypothesis that the repeatedly observed limited stability of ES2 parameters might be caused by the variability of individual psychophysiological states. Against expectation, subjective pain perception is not systematically correlated with ES2 parameters. Thus it can be questioned whether the ES2 is directly associated with pain processing at all.
Keywords :
Depressive mood , Exteroceptive suppression , Heterotopic pressure pain , Relaxation , Psychophysiological state , STRESS
Journal title :
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Record number :
1742859
Link To Document :
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