The impact of a virtual wound on pain sensitivity: insights into the affective dimension of pain.

IF 2.5 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2025-02-26 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpain.2025.1502616
Ingrid Koopmans, Robert-Jan Doll, Maurice Hagemeijer, Robert van Barneveld, Marieke de Kam, Geert Jan Groeneveld
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Abstract

Background: The perception of pain is difficult to assess due to the complex combination of various components related to nociception, experience, and cognition. There are currently no biomarkers to assess the affective component of pain in healthy volunteers. Using Virtual Reality (VR), it may be possible to assess changes in pain perception when adding an affective component to painful stimulation.

Methods: In this two-visit feasibility study, we assess the effect of a simulated wound in VR on the electrical pain detection (PDT) and tolerance (PTT) threshold in 24 healthy male study participants. The VR simulation presented a copy of the research room from first person view. Prior to each VR assessment, study participants were primed by interacting with the VR environment. Two conditions were assessed: (1) VR-Wound: a burn-wound, smoke, and electrical sparks become visible and audible with increasing stimulus intensity, and (2) VR-neutral: no additional aspects. The PDT and PTT to electrical stimuli were recorded during both VR conditions and outside of VR. VAS-Questionnaires were used to assess unpleasantness and fear.

Results: The PDT decreased when a virtual wound is presented compared to a neutral condition. Study participants experienced the electrical stimulation as more painful and more intense during the wound simulation than during the neutral condition. The effect was more pronounced during the second visit.

Conclusion: VR enhanced the perception of pain, thereby providing new insights into the affective component of pain. Further testing of this methodology is warranted by performing a clinical study that evaluates drug effects on the affective component of pain.

虚拟伤口对疼痛敏感性的影响:洞察疼痛的情感维度。
背景:疼痛的感知是难以评估的,因为与伤害感觉、经验和认知相关的各种成分的复杂组合。目前还没有生物标志物来评估健康志愿者疼痛的情感成分。使用虚拟现实(VR),当在疼痛刺激中添加情感成分时,可能会评估疼痛感知的变化。方法:在这项两次访问的可行性研究中,我们评估了VR中模拟伤口对24名健康男性研究参与者的电痛检测(PDT)和耐受性(PTT)阈值的影响。虚拟现实模拟从第一人称视角呈现了一个研究室的副本。在每次虚拟现实评估之前,研究参与者通过与虚拟现实环境的互动来启动。评估了两种情况:(1)vr伤口:烧伤伤口,随着刺激强度的增加,烟雾和电火花变得可见和可听;(2)vr中性:没有其他方面。在虚拟现实和非虚拟现实条件下记录电刺激的PDT和PTT。vas -问卷用于评估不愉快和恐惧。结果:与中性条件相比,虚拟伤口呈现时PDT下降。研究参与者在伤口模拟过程中感受到的电刺激比在中性状态下更痛苦、更强烈。在第二次访问时,效果更加明显。结论:VR增强了对疼痛的感知,从而为疼痛的情感成分提供了新的见解。通过一项临床研究来评估药物对疼痛的情感成分的影响,可以对该方法进行进一步的测试。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
13 weeks
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