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Counterirritation by pain inhibits the responsiveness to aversive loud tones: the role of state anxiety and state fear triggered in the NPU paradigm.

Silvia MetzgerClaudia Horn-HofmannMiriam KunzStefan Lautenbacher
Published in: Somatosensory & motor research (2024)
Our study showed that pain inhibits the responsiveness to aversive stimuli (loud tones). Thus, the postulate that 'pain inhibits pain' might be better changed to 'pain inhibits aversiveness'. Consequently, our findings may also question the assumption of a clear pain specificity in inhibitory action as assumed by theoretical approaches like 'conditioned pain modulation' (CPM). Furthermore, counterirritation appeared one more time resistant to the influence of negative emotions.
Keyphrases
  • chronic pain
  • pain management
  • neuropathic pain
  • spinal cord injury
  • depressive symptoms
  • postoperative pain