Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.

BACKGROUND: Human experimental pain models leading to development of secondary hyperalgesia are used to estimate efficacy of analgesics and antihyperalgesics. The ability to develop an area of secondary hyperalgesia varies substantially between subjects, but little is known about the agreement follo...

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Main Authors: Mads U Werner, Karin L Petersen, Michael C Rowbotham, Jørgen B Dahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3650051?pdf=render
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author Mads U Werner
Karin L Petersen
Michael C Rowbotham
Jørgen B Dahl
author_facet Mads U Werner
Karin L Petersen
Michael C Rowbotham
Jørgen B Dahl
author_sort Mads U Werner
collection DOAJ
description BACKGROUND: Human experimental pain models leading to development of secondary hyperalgesia are used to estimate efficacy of analgesics and antihyperalgesics. The ability to develop an area of secondary hyperalgesia varies substantially between subjects, but little is known about the agreement following repeated measurements. The aim of this study was to determine if the areas of secondary hyperalgesia were consistently robust to be useful for phenotyping subjects, based on their pattern of sensitization by the heat pain models. METHODS: We performed post-hoc analyses of 10 completed healthy volunteer studies (n = 342 [409 repeated measurements]). Three different models were used to induce secondary hyperalgesia to monofilament stimulation: the heat/capsaicin sensitization (H/C), the brief thermal sensitization (BTS), and the burn injury (BI) models. Three studies included both the H/C and BTS models. RESULTS: Within-subject compared to between-subject variability was low, and there was substantial strength of agreement between repeated induction-sessions in most studies. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) improved little with repeated testing beyond two sessions. There was good agreement in categorizing subjects into 'small area' (1(st) quartile [<25%]) and 'large area' (4(th) quartile [>75%]) responders: 56-76% of subjects consistently fell into same 'small-area' or 'large-area' category on two consecutive study days. There was moderate to substantial agreement between the areas of secondary hyperalgesia induced on the same day using the H/C (forearm) and BTS (thigh) models. CONCLUSION: Secondary hyperalgesia induced by experimental heat pain models seem a consistent measure of sensitization in pharmacodynamic and physiological research. The analysis indicates that healthy volunteers can be phenotyped based on their pattern of sensitization by the heat [and heat plus capsaicin] pain models.
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spelling doaj.art-56ab7624921f4a7c99a36fb3bd12c2ce2022-12-22T01:32:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0185e6273310.1371/journal.pone.0062733Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.Mads U WernerKarin L PetersenMichael C RowbothamJørgen B DahlBACKGROUND: Human experimental pain models leading to development of secondary hyperalgesia are used to estimate efficacy of analgesics and antihyperalgesics. The ability to develop an area of secondary hyperalgesia varies substantially between subjects, but little is known about the agreement following repeated measurements. The aim of this study was to determine if the areas of secondary hyperalgesia were consistently robust to be useful for phenotyping subjects, based on their pattern of sensitization by the heat pain models. METHODS: We performed post-hoc analyses of 10 completed healthy volunteer studies (n = 342 [409 repeated measurements]). Three different models were used to induce secondary hyperalgesia to monofilament stimulation: the heat/capsaicin sensitization (H/C), the brief thermal sensitization (BTS), and the burn injury (BI) models. Three studies included both the H/C and BTS models. RESULTS: Within-subject compared to between-subject variability was low, and there was substantial strength of agreement between repeated induction-sessions in most studies. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) improved little with repeated testing beyond two sessions. There was good agreement in categorizing subjects into 'small area' (1(st) quartile [<25%]) and 'large area' (4(th) quartile [>75%]) responders: 56-76% of subjects consistently fell into same 'small-area' or 'large-area' category on two consecutive study days. There was moderate to substantial agreement between the areas of secondary hyperalgesia induced on the same day using the H/C (forearm) and BTS (thigh) models. CONCLUSION: Secondary hyperalgesia induced by experimental heat pain models seem a consistent measure of sensitization in pharmacodynamic and physiological research. The analysis indicates that healthy volunteers can be phenotyped based on their pattern of sensitization by the heat [and heat plus capsaicin] pain models.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3650051?pdf=render
spellingShingle Mads U Werner
Karin L Petersen
Michael C Rowbotham
Jørgen B Dahl
Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.
PLoS ONE
title Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.
title_full Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.
title_fullStr Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.
title_full_unstemmed Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.
title_short Healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models.
title_sort healthy volunteers can be phenotyped using cutaneous sensitization pain models
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3650051?pdf=render
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AT karinlpetersen healthyvolunteerscanbephenotypedusingcutaneoussensitizationpainmodels
AT michaelcrowbotham healthyvolunteerscanbephenotypedusingcutaneoussensitizationpainmodels
AT jørgenbdahl healthyvolunteerscanbephenotypedusingcutaneoussensitizationpainmodels