Search results for "Thermosensing"

showing 7 items of 17 documents

Changes in cytosolic calcium in response to noxious heat and their relationship to vanilloid receptors in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons.

2001

Heat transduction mechanisms in primary nociceptive afferents have been suggested to involve a vanilloid receptor channel with high calcium permeability. To characterize the changes in free cytosolic calcium evoked by noxious heat stimuli (< or =51 degrees C, 10s), we performed microfluorometric measurements in acutely dissociated small dorsal root ganglion neurons (< or =32.5 microm) of adult rats using the dye FURA-2. Only neurons that responded with a reversible increase in intracellular calcium to high potassium were evaluated. Heat-induced calcium transients (exceeding mean + 3S.D. of the temperature dependence of the dye) were found in 66 of 105 neurons. These transients increased non…

MaleHot Temperaturemedicine.drug_classReceptors Drugchemistry.chemical_elementPainCalcium channel blockerCalciumCalcium in biologyRats Sprague-Dawleychemistry.chemical_compoundCytosolGanglia SpinalmedicineAnimalsThermosensingCalcium SignalingNeurons AfferentCells CulturedFluorescent DyesCalcium metabolismVoltage-dependent calcium channelGeneral NeuroscienceMyocardiumT-type calcium channelNociceptorsRatschemistryBiochemistryCapsaicinBiophysicsPotassiumCalciumFemaleCalcium ChannelsCapsaicinCapsazepineFura-2Signal TransductionNeuroscience
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Sensory neuropathy and signs of central sensitization in patients with peripheral arterial disease.

2006

Patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) may develop a broad range of peripheral nerve dysfunctions including pain and sensory deficiencies due to chronic ischemia mostly involving the lower limbs. To investigate the degree of sensory abnormalities in such patients quantitative sensory testing (QST) might be a useful tool. Forty-five patients and 20 controls were enrolled in the present study and underwent QST according to the protocol of the German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain. PAD was graded according to the Rutherford classification. PAD patients were divided into two groups: 16 patients with critical limb ischemia (severe PAD) and 29 patients with intermittent claudicatio…

MalePain ThresholdIschemiaSensationSensationmedicineHumansThermosensingAgedPain MeasurementNeurologic ExaminationPeripheral Vascular DiseasesAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryPeripheral Nervous System DiseasesCritical limb ischemiamedicine.diseaseIntermittent claudicationbody regionsAnesthesiology and Pain MedicinePeripheral neuropathyAllodyniamedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyAnesthesiaCase-Control StudiesNeuropathic painSensation DisordersFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessSensory nervePain
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The effects of diazepam on the behavioral structure of the rat's response to pain in the hot-plate test: Anxiolysis vs. pain modulation

2011

The aim of the present study was to evaluate, by means of quantitative and multivariate analyses, the effects of diazepam on the behavioral structure of the rat's response to pain in the hot-plate test as well as whether such changes are associated with drug-induced effects on anxiety and/or nociception. To this purpose, ten groups of male Wistar rats were intraperitoneally injected with saline, diazepam (0.25, 0.5 and 2 mg/kg), FG-7142 (1, 4 and 8 mg/kg) or morphine (3, 6 and 12 mg/kg). The mean number and mean latency to first appearance were calculated for each behavioral component. In addition, multivariate cluster and adjusted residual analyses based on the elaboration of transition ma…

MalePain ThresholdPainAnxietyMotor ActivityFG-7142Settore BIO/09 - FisiologiaCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundSniffingReaction TimemedicineAnimalsAnxiety Pain Diazepam FG-7142 Morphine Hot-plate Multivariate analysis RatThermosensingRats WistarHot plate testPain MeasurementPharmacologyAnalgesicsDiazepamBehavior AnimalRatsNociceptionAnti-Anxiety AgentschemistryAnesthesiaMorphineAnxietymedicine.symptomLickingPsychologyDiazepammedicine.drug
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Thermal Thresholds Predict Painfulness of Diabetic Neuropathies

2004

OBJECTIVE—Pathophysiology explaining pain in diabetic neuropathy (DN) is still unknown. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Thirty patients with peripheral DN (17 men and 13 women; mean age 52.4 ± 2.5 years) were investigated. Fifteen patients had neuropathic pain, and 15 patients were free of pain. Patients were followed over 2 years and examined at the beginning and thereafter every 6 months. Clinical severity and painfulness of the DN were assessed by the neuropathy impairment score and visual analog scales (VASs). Cold and warm perception thresholds as well as heat pain thresholds were obtained for evaluation of Aδ- and C-fibers. Nerve conduction velocities (NCVs) and vibratory thresholds were …

MalePain Thresholdmedicine.medical_specialtyHot TemperatureDiabetic neuropathyVisual analogue scaleEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismElectromyographyRisk AssessmentSeverity of Illness IndexDiabetic NeuropathiesPredictive Value of TestsReference ValuesDiabetes mellitusSeverity of illnessInternal MedicinemedicineHumansHeart rate variabilityThermosensingPain MeasurementProbabilityAdvanced and Specialized Nursingmedicine.diagnostic_testElectromyographybusiness.industryMiddle AgedPrognosismedicine.diseaseCold TemperatureElectrophysiologyDiabetes Mellitus Type 1Diabetes Mellitus Type 2HyperalgesiaCase-Control StudiesSensory ThresholdsAnesthesiaPredictive value of testsNeuropathic painPhysical therapyFemalebusinessDiabetes Care
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Ageing reduces skin wetness sensitivity across the body.

2021

New findings What is the central question of this study? Ageing impairs the skin's thermal and tactile sensitivity: does ageing also induce loss of skin wetness sensitivity? What is the main finding and its importance? Older adults show an average 15% loss of skin wetness sensitivity, with this sensory deficit being mediated by a combination of reductions in skin's tactile sensing and hydration status. These findings increase knowledge of wetness sensing mechanisms across the lifespan. Abstract Humans use sensory integration mechanisms to sense skin wetness based on thermal and mechanical cues. Ageing impairs the skin's thermal and tactile sensitivity, yet we lack evidence on whether wetnes…

MaleskinAgingTemperature sensitivitySense skinPhysiologyPhysiologyStimulus (physiology)body temperature regulationskinwetnessPhysiology (medical)Skin Physiological Phenomenaageing; body temperature regulation; skin; thermoreceptors; wetnessMedicineHumansThermosensingSkin wetnessHydration statusAgedSkinNutrition and Dieteticsbody temperature regulationintegumentary systembusiness.industrythermoreceptorsGeneral MedicineIndex fingerthermoreceptorsthermoreceptormedicine.anatomical_structureageingTouch PerceptionageingAgeingThermoreceptorbusinessSkin TemperatureExperimental physiologyREFERENCES
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Somatic Symptom Perception From a Predictive Processing Perspective: An Empirical Test Using the Thermal Grill Illusion.

2020

OBJECTIVE In a predictive processing perspective, symptom perceptions result from an integration of preexisting information in memory with sensory input. Physical symptoms can therefore reflect the relative predominance of either sensory input or preexisting information. In this study, we used the thermal grill illusion (TGI), which applies interlaced warm and cool temperatures to the skin to create a paradoxical heat-pain experience. Assuming that the TGI compared with single-temperature stimulation relies more importantly on an active integration process of the brain to create this paradoxical sensation, we tested the hypothesis whether a manipulation of the expectations during TGI would …

Pain Thresholdmedicine.medical_specialtyHot TemperatureNocebomedia_common.quotation_subjectAudiologyStimulus (physiology)Placebo03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePerceptionSensationmedicineHumansThermosensingThermal grill illusionApplied Psychologymedia_commonPain PerceptionNeuroticismIllusions030227 psychiatryNocebo EffectPsychiatry and Mental healthMedically Unexplained SymptomsPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychosomatic medicine
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The veridical perception of object temperature with varying skin temperature.

1988

The effect of skin-adaptation temperature on object-temperature perception was investigated, using the method of dichiric matching, in an attempt to determine whether veridical perception of physical object temperature occurs in human subjects. Observers were presented with a test temperature on one hand and required to find a matching temperature, that is, one that produced the same sensation, on the other, differently adapted, hand. Using equality of test and matching temperatures as a criterion of veridical perception, it was found that the latter improves with ΔT, the difference between object temperature and skin-adaptation temperature. It is postulated that when ΔT is close to zero, v…

Parallel processing (psychology)AdultMaleMatching (statistics)media_common.quotation_subjectObject (grammar)Differential ThresholdExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySummationPerceptionSensationHumansComputer visionThermosensingGeneral Psychologymedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industrySkin temperatureAdaptation PhysiologicalSensory SystemsImproved performanceFemaleArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychologySkin TemperaturePerceptionpsychophysics
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