Effects of deep brain stimulation and verbal suggestions on pain in Parkinson's disease.

IF 1.5 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Scandinavian Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-03-14 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1515/sjpain-2023-0126
Sophie Rosenkjær, Victor Schwartz Hvingelby, Erik Lisbjerg Johnsen, Mette Møller, Elisa Carlino, Troels Staehelin Jensen, Lene Vase
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Abstract

Background and objectives: In Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, verbal suggestions have been shown to modulate motor and clinical outcomes in treatment with subthalamic deep brain stimulation (DBS). Furthermore, DBS may alleviate pain in PD. However, it is unknown if verbal suggestions influence DBS' effects on pain.

Methods: Twenty-four people with PD and DBS had stimulation downregulated (80-60 to 20%) and upregulated (from 20-60 to 80%) in a blinded manner on randomized test days: (1) with negative and positive suggestions of pain for down- and upregulation, respectively, and (2) with no suggestions to effect (control). Effects of DBS and verbal suggestions were assessed on ongoing and evoked pain (hypertonic saline injections) via 0-10 numerical rating scales along with motor symptoms, expectations, and blinding.

Results: Stimulation did not influence ongoing and evoked pain but influenced motor symptoms in the expected direction. Baseline and experimental pain measures showed no patterns in degree of pain. There was a trend toward negative suggestions increasing pain and positive suggestions decreasing pain. Results show significant differences in identical stimulation with negative vs positive suggestions (60% conditions AUC 38.75 vs 23.32, t(13) = 3.10, p < 0.001). Expectations to pain had small to moderate effects on evoked pain. Patients estimated stimulation level correctly within 10 points.

Conclusion: Stimulation does not seem to influence ongoing and evoked pain, but verbal suggestions may influence pain levels. Patients appear to be unblinded to stimulation level which is an important consideration for future studies testing DBS in an attempted blind fashion.

脑深部刺激和口头建议对帕金森病患者疼痛的影响。
背景和目的:在对帕金森病(PD)患者进行眼下丘脑下深部脑刺激(DBS)治疗时,口头建议已被证明可调节运动和临床疗效。此外,DBS 可减轻帕金森病患者的疼痛。然而,口头建议是否会影响 DBS 对疼痛的影响尚不得而知:24名患有帕金森病和DBS的患者在随机测试日以盲法对刺激进行了下调(80-60%至20%)和上调(从20-60%至80%):(1)下调和上调时分别有消极和积极的疼痛暗示,(2)没有暗示效果(对照组)。通过0-10数字评分量表以及运动症状、预期和盲法评估DBS和口头建议对持续疼痛和诱发疼痛(高渗盐水注射)的影响:结果:刺激对持续疼痛和诱发疼痛没有影响,但对运动症状有预期的影响。基线和实验性疼痛测量结果显示,疼痛程度没有规律可循。消极暗示会增加疼痛,而积极暗示会减少疼痛。结果显示,负面建议与正面建议对相同刺激的影响存在明显差异(60% 条件下 AUC 为 38.75 vs 23.32,t(13) = 3.10,p < 0.001)。对疼痛的预期对诱发疼痛有轻微到中等程度的影响。患者对刺激水平的正确估计在 10 分以内:刺激似乎不会影响持续疼痛和诱发疼痛,但口头建议可能会影响疼痛程度。患者似乎对刺激水平不设盲区,这对未来尝试盲法测试 DBS 的研究来说是一个重要的考虑因素。
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来源期刊
Scandinavian Journal of Pain
Scandinavian Journal of Pain CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
73
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