Changes in Affective Pain Processing in Human Volunteers
Pain, Acute, Pain, Chronic, Low Back Pain
About this trial
This is an interventional basic science trial for Pain, Acute focused on measuring acute pain, chronic pain, low back pain, hedonic shift, emotional-motivation components of pain, sensory-discriminative components of pain, operant conditioning, metacognition
Eligibility Criteria
For Healthy participants
Inclusion Criteria:
- good overall health status
- sufficient knowledge of German or English to follow instructions
- ability to give written informed consent
Exclusion Criteria:
- pain longer than >3 consecutive days and on more than 30 days within the last 12 months
- major psychiatric or neurological disorders, and substance abuse
- consumption of alcohol, illegal drugs, and analgesic drug within 24 hours before testing
For chronic pain patients
Inclusion Criteria:
- unspecific musculoskeletal chronic pain
- sufficient knowledge of German or English to follow instructions
- ability to give written informed consent
Exclusion Criteria:
- major psychiatric or neurological disorders, excluding depression and anxiety, and substance abuse
- consumption of alcohol, illegal drugs, and analgesic drugs within 24 hours before testing
Sites / Locations
- Balgrist CampusRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Experimental
Experimental
Substudy 1
Substudy 2
Substudy 3
All participants will perform two psychophysical tasks to assess sensory-discriminative and emotional-motivational pain responses independently from each other. No arms will perform. In addition, in Substudy 1 an operant learning paradigm will be implemented to dissociate these responses, increasing the sensory-discriminative pain responses compared to emotional-motivational pain responses by contingent monetary reinforcement and vice versa. Primary objectives: To develop psychophysical methods that allow the independent assessment of sensory-discriminative and emotional-motivational pain responses and to show that emotional-motivational and sensory-discriminative pain components can be dissociated Secondary objective: To assess whether fear of pain, fear-avoidance beliefs, pain catastrophizing, and sensation seeking as personality traits can explain variations in how strongly sensory-discriminative and emotional-motivational pain responses can be dissociated
All participants will perform two psychophysical tasks to assess sensory-discriminative and emotional-motivational pain responses independently from each other. No arms will perform. In addition, in Substudy 2, responses of chronic pain patients will be compared to those of healthy participants to characterize possible alterations in the patients and operant learning will be operationalized to decrease emotional-motivational pain responses, which are assumed to be already increased in the patients. Primary objective: To demonstrate that in chronic pain patients, emotional-motivational pain responses are increased relative to sensory-discriminative pain responses Secondary objective: To assess whether fear of pain, fear-avoidance beliefs, pain catastrophizing, and sensation seeking as personality traits can explain variations in the present dissociation of sensory-discriminative and emotional-motivational pain responses in chronic pain patients
All participants will perform a psychophysical task to assess metacognition in pain perception as an indicator of the cognitive-evaluative pain component. No arms will perform. Primary objective: To assess whether metacognition on pain perception are involved and subjective ratings of perceived pain and how metacognition relates to pain intensity. Secondary objective: To assess whether confidentiality as a personality trait , pain catastrophizing, and skin conductance responses are related to metacognition in pain.