Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans

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Standard

Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans. / Andersen, Hjalte H.; van Laarhoven, Antoinette I.M.; Elberling, Jesper; Arendt-Nielsen, Lars.

I: Journal of Pain, Bind 18, Nr. 12, 12.2017, s. 1437-1450.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Andersen, HH, van Laarhoven, AIM, Elberling, J & Arendt-Nielsen, L 2017, 'Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans', Journal of Pain, bind 18, nr. 12, s. 1437-1450. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2017.07.002

APA

Andersen, H. H., van Laarhoven, A. I. M., Elberling, J., & Arendt-Nielsen, L. (2017). Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans. Journal of Pain, 18(12), 1437-1450. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2017.07.002

Vancouver

Andersen HH, van Laarhoven AIM, Elberling J, Arendt-Nielsen L. Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans. Journal of Pain. 2017 dec.;18(12):1437-1450. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2017.07.002

Author

Andersen, Hjalte H. ; van Laarhoven, Antoinette I.M. ; Elberling, Jesper ; Arendt-Nielsen, Lars. / Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans. I: Journal of Pain. 2017 ; Bind 18, Nr. 12. s. 1437-1450.

Bibtex

@article{4f5d6f509d7f494297e32b8783bc39bc,
title = "Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans",
abstract = "Little is known about endogenous descending control of itch. In chronic pain, descending pain inhibition is reduced as signified by lowered conditioned pain modulation. There are indications that patients with chronic itch may also exhibit reduced endogenous descending inhibition of itch and pain. This study aimed to investigate whether and the extent to which itch can be modulated by conditioning itch and pain stimuli. Twenty-six healthy volunteers participated. The study consisted of 5 conditions designed to systematically assess endogenous modulation of itch or pain: 1) itch-induced modulation of contralateral itch, 2) pain-induced modulation of contralateral itch, 3) pain-induced modulation of ipsilateral itch, 4) pain-induced modulation of contralateral pain, and 5) itch-induced modulation of contralateral pain. Conditioning stimuli were cold pressor-induced pain and histamine-evoked itch, whereas the test stimuli were electrical stimulation paradigms designed to evoke itch or pain. Pain was significantly reduced (conditioned pain modulation-effect) by the conditioning pain stimulus (P < .001), but not by the conditioning itch stimulus (negative control condition). Itch was significantly reduced (conditioned itch modulation-effect) by contra- as well as ipsilateral applied conditioning pain (both P < .001), whereas conditioning itch stimulation only marginally reduced itch. Endogenous descending itch inhibition through mechanisms that are independent of segmental gating can be readily evoked by heterotopic conditioning pain stimulation. However, robust descending inhibition of itch cannot be evoked with conditioning itch stimulation. Perspective The study showed a hierarchical prioritization favoring pain-induced central descending modulation of itch as well as pain in humans. Future studies addressing potential aberrations in pain-evoked descending modulation of itch in chronic itch patients are warranted.",
keywords = "conditioned itch modulation, conditioned pain modulation, descending inhibition, Itch, pain",
author = "Andersen, {Hjalte H.} and {van Laarhoven}, {Antoinette I.M.} and Jesper Elberling and Lars Arendt-Nielsen",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1016/j.jpain.2017.07.002",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "1437--1450",
journal = "The Journal of Pain",
issn = "1526-5900",
publisher = "Churchill Livingstone",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Modulation of Itch by Conditioning Itch and Pain Stimulation in Healthy Humans

AU - Andersen, Hjalte H.

AU - van Laarhoven, Antoinette I.M.

AU - Elberling, Jesper

AU - Arendt-Nielsen, Lars

PY - 2017/12

Y1 - 2017/12

N2 - Little is known about endogenous descending control of itch. In chronic pain, descending pain inhibition is reduced as signified by lowered conditioned pain modulation. There are indications that patients with chronic itch may also exhibit reduced endogenous descending inhibition of itch and pain. This study aimed to investigate whether and the extent to which itch can be modulated by conditioning itch and pain stimuli. Twenty-six healthy volunteers participated. The study consisted of 5 conditions designed to systematically assess endogenous modulation of itch or pain: 1) itch-induced modulation of contralateral itch, 2) pain-induced modulation of contralateral itch, 3) pain-induced modulation of ipsilateral itch, 4) pain-induced modulation of contralateral pain, and 5) itch-induced modulation of contralateral pain. Conditioning stimuli were cold pressor-induced pain and histamine-evoked itch, whereas the test stimuli were electrical stimulation paradigms designed to evoke itch or pain. Pain was significantly reduced (conditioned pain modulation-effect) by the conditioning pain stimulus (P < .001), but not by the conditioning itch stimulus (negative control condition). Itch was significantly reduced (conditioned itch modulation-effect) by contra- as well as ipsilateral applied conditioning pain (both P < .001), whereas conditioning itch stimulation only marginally reduced itch. Endogenous descending itch inhibition through mechanisms that are independent of segmental gating can be readily evoked by heterotopic conditioning pain stimulation. However, robust descending inhibition of itch cannot be evoked with conditioning itch stimulation. Perspective The study showed a hierarchical prioritization favoring pain-induced central descending modulation of itch as well as pain in humans. Future studies addressing potential aberrations in pain-evoked descending modulation of itch in chronic itch patients are warranted.

AB - Little is known about endogenous descending control of itch. In chronic pain, descending pain inhibition is reduced as signified by lowered conditioned pain modulation. There are indications that patients with chronic itch may also exhibit reduced endogenous descending inhibition of itch and pain. This study aimed to investigate whether and the extent to which itch can be modulated by conditioning itch and pain stimuli. Twenty-six healthy volunteers participated. The study consisted of 5 conditions designed to systematically assess endogenous modulation of itch or pain: 1) itch-induced modulation of contralateral itch, 2) pain-induced modulation of contralateral itch, 3) pain-induced modulation of ipsilateral itch, 4) pain-induced modulation of contralateral pain, and 5) itch-induced modulation of contralateral pain. Conditioning stimuli were cold pressor-induced pain and histamine-evoked itch, whereas the test stimuli were electrical stimulation paradigms designed to evoke itch or pain. Pain was significantly reduced (conditioned pain modulation-effect) by the conditioning pain stimulus (P < .001), but not by the conditioning itch stimulus (negative control condition). Itch was significantly reduced (conditioned itch modulation-effect) by contra- as well as ipsilateral applied conditioning pain (both P < .001), whereas conditioning itch stimulation only marginally reduced itch. Endogenous descending itch inhibition through mechanisms that are independent of segmental gating can be readily evoked by heterotopic conditioning pain stimulation. However, robust descending inhibition of itch cannot be evoked with conditioning itch stimulation. Perspective The study showed a hierarchical prioritization favoring pain-induced central descending modulation of itch as well as pain in humans. Future studies addressing potential aberrations in pain-evoked descending modulation of itch in chronic itch patients are warranted.

KW - conditioned itch modulation

KW - conditioned pain modulation

KW - descending inhibition

KW - Itch

KW - pain

U2 - 10.1016/j.jpain.2017.07.002

DO - 10.1016/j.jpain.2017.07.002

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28709954

AN - SCOPUS:85034047567

VL - 18

SP - 1437

EP - 1450

JO - The Journal of Pain

JF - The Journal of Pain

SN - 1526-5900

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 188221969