Impact of Music on First Pain and Temporal Summation of Second Pain

IF 1.3 2区 心理学 0 MUSIC Music Perception Pub Date : 2021-02-01 DOI:10.1525/MP.2021.38.3.267
M. Cabon, Anais Le Fur-Bonnabesse, S. Genestet, B. Quinio, L. Miséry, A. Woda, C. Bodéré
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Passive music listening has shown its capacity to soothe pain in several clinical and experimental studies. This phenomenon—known as music-induced analgesia—could partly be explained by the modulation of pain signals in response to the stimulation of brain and brainstem centers. We hypothesized that music-induced analgesia may involve inhibitory descending pain systems. We assessed pain-related responses to endogenous pain control mechanisms known to depend on descending pain modulation: peak of first pain (PP), temporal summation (TS), and diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC). Twenty-seven healthy participants (14 men, 13 women) were exposed to a conditioned pain modulation paradigm during a 20-minute relaxing music session and a silence condition. Pain was continually measured with a visual analogue scale. Pain ratings were significantly lower with music listening (p < .02). Repeated measures ANOVA indicated significant differences between conditions within PP and TS (p < .05) but not in DNIC. Those findings suggested that music listening could strengthen components of the inhibitory descending pain pathways operating at the dorsal spinal cord level.
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音乐对第一疼痛和第二疼痛时间累积的影响
在几项临床和实验研究中,被动听音乐已经显示出其缓解疼痛的能力。这种现象被称为音乐诱导的镇痛,部分原因可以解释为大脑和脑干中心刺激时疼痛信号的调制。我们假设音乐诱导的镇痛可能涉及抑制性下行疼痛系统。我们评估了对内源性疼痛控制机制的疼痛相关反应,这些机制已知依赖于下行疼痛调节:首次疼痛峰值(PP)、时间总和(TS)和弥漫性有害抑制控制(DNIC)。27名健康参与者(14名男性,13名女性)在20分钟的放松音乐课程和沉默条件下,暴露于条件性疼痛调节模式。用视觉模拟量表持续测量疼痛。听音乐时疼痛评分显著降低(p<.02)。重复测量ANOVA显示PP和TS中的情况之间存在显著差异(p<.05),但DNIC中没有。这些发现表明,听音乐可以增强脊髓背侧抑制性下行疼痛通路的成分。
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来源期刊
Music Perception
Music Perception Multiple-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.30%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Music Perception charts the ongoing scholarly discussion and study of musical phenomena. Publishing original empirical and theoretical papers, methodological articles and critical reviews from renowned scientists and musicians, Music Perception is a repository of insightful research. The broad range of disciplines covered in the journal includes: •Psychology •Psychophysics •Linguistics •Neurology •Neurophysiology •Artificial intelligence •Computer technology •Physical and architectural acoustics •Music theory
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