Effect of movement‐evoked and tonic experimental pain on muscle force production

Author:

Cabral Hélio V.123,Devecchi Valter12,Oxendale Chelsea124,Jenkinson Ned15,Falla Deborah12,Gallina Alessio12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

2. Centre of Precision Rehabilitation for Spinal Pain College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

3. Department of Clinical and Experimental Sciences Università degli Studi di Brescia Brescia Italy

4. Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences University of Chester Chester UK

5. Centre for Human Brain Health, College of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionWhen performing an exercise or a functional test, pain that is evoked by movement or muscle contraction could be a stronger stimulus for changing how individuals move compared to tonic pain. We investigated whether the decrease in muscle force production is larger when experimentally‐induced knee pain is directly associated to the torque produced (movement‐evoked) compared to a constant painful stimulation (tonic).MethodsTwenty‐one participants performed three isometric knee extension maximal voluntary contractions without pain (baseline), during pain, and after pain. Knee pain was induced using sinusoidal electrical stimuli at 10 Hz over the infrapatellar fat pad, applied continuously or modulated proportionally to the knee extension torque. Peak torque and contraction duration were averaged across repetitions and normalized to baseline.ResultsDuring tonic pain, participants reported lower pain intensity during the contraction than at rest (p < 0.001), whereas pain intensity increased with contraction during movement‐evoked pain (p < 0.001). Knee extension torque decreased during both pain conditions (p < 0.001), but a larger reduction was observed during movement‐evoked compared to tonic pain (p < 0.001). Participants produced torque for longer during tonic compared to movement‐evoked pain (p = 0.005).ConclusionOur results indicate that movement‐evoked pain was a more potent stimulus to reduce knee extension torque than tonic pain. The longer contraction time observed during tonic pain may be a result of a lower perceived pain intensity during muscle contraction. Overall, our results suggest different motor adaptation to tonic and movement‐evoked pain and support the notion that motor adaptation to pain is a purposeful strategy to limit pain. This mechanistic evidence suggests that individuals experiencing prevalently tonic or movement‐evoked pain may exhibit different motor adaptations, which may be important for exercise prescription.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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