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

Author:

Cabon Mathilde1,Fur-Bonnabesse Anais Le1,Genestet Steeve2,Quinio Bertrand2,Misery Laurent1,Woda Alain3,Bodéré Céline1

Affiliation:

1. Univ Brest, LIEN, Brest, France

2. Brest University Hospital Centre, Brest, France

3. Clermont Auvergne University, Clermont-Ferrand, France

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.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

Music

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