Priming of central and peripheral mechanisms with heat and cutaneous capsaicin facilitates secondary hyperalgesia to high-frequency electrical stimulation.
Rosa HugosdottirMindy KastingCarsten Dahl MørchOle Kaeseler AndersenLars Arendt-NielsenPublished in: Journal of neurophysiology (2022)
Heat/capsaicin sensitization and electrical high-frequency stimulation (HFS) are well-known models of secondary hyperalgesia, a phenomenon related to chronic pain conditions. This study investigated whether priming with heat/capsaicin would facilitate hyperalgesia to HFS in healthy subjects. Heat/capsaicin priming consisted of a 45°C heat stimulation for 5 min followed by a topical capsaicin patch (4 × 4 cm) for 30 min on the volar forearm of 20 subjects. HFS (100 Hz, 5 times 1 s, minimum 1.5 mA) was subsequently delivered through a transcutaneous pin electrode approximately 1.5 cm proximal to the heat/capsaicin application. Two sessions were applied in a crossover design; traditional HFS (HFS) and heat/capsaicin sensitization followed by HFS (HFS + HEAT/CAPS). Heat pain threshold (HPT), mechanical pain sensitivity (MPS), and superficial blood perfusion were assessed at baseline, after capsaicin removal, and up to 40 min after HFS. MPS was assessed with pin-prick stimulation (128 mN and 256 mN) in the area adjacent to both HFS and heat/capsaicin, distal but adjacent to heat/capsaicin and in a distal control area. HPT was assessed in the area of heat/capsaicin. Higher sensitivity to 128 mN pin-prick stimulation (difference from baseline and control area) was observed in the HFS + HEAT/CAPS session than in the HFS session 20 and 30 min after HFS. Furthermore, sensitivity was increased after HFS + HEAT/CAPS compared with after heat/capsaicin in the area adjacent to both paradigms, but not in the area distal to heat/capsaicin. Results indicate that heat/capsaicin causes priming of the central and peripheral nervous system, which facilitates secondary mechanical hyperalgesia to HFS. NEW & NOTEWORTHY High-frequency electrical stimulation (HFS) and heat/capsaicin sensitization are well-known models of secondary hyperalgesia. The results from the current study indicate that increased sensitivity to 128 mN pin-prick stimulation can be obtained when HFS is delivered following an already established heightened central hyperexcitability provoked by heat/capsaicin sensitization.