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Experimental Pain in Parkinsons

Recruiting
years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

Study comparing pain intensity and discomfort in patients with Parkinson´s disease and healthy controls during inducement of mechanical, thermal, and chemical experimental pain

Description

Project: Inducing experimental muscle pain in healthy volunteers, patients with Parkinson's disease in levodopa treatment, and patients with Parkinson's disease with deep brain stimulation treatment

Research team:

  • Andrea S. Poulsen (PI), PhD-student, AU
  • Sophie Rosenkjær, PhD-student, AU
  • Lene Vase, Professor, AU
  • Nanna B. Finnerup, Professor, AUH
  • Mette Møller, Leading doctor, AUH
  • Erisela Qerama Montvilas, Clinical lector, AUH
  • Jan Rosner, Post-doc, AUH

Objective: Comparing induced pain levels in (1) healthy volunteers, (2) patients with Parkinson's disease in levodopa treatment, and (3) patients with Parkinson's disease with deep brain stimulation treatment

Participants: 21 healthy volunteers, 21 patients with Parkinson's disease in levodopa treatment, and 21 patients with Parkinson's disease with deep brain stimulation treatment will be recruited from the Department of Neurology at Aarhus University Hospital. Furthermore, recruitment sheets will be posted at Aarhus University Hospital, at Parkinsonforeningen's webpage (https://www.parkinson.dk/) and newsletter and in local newspapers. A power calculation for a Wilcoxcon-Mann-Whitney rank sum test (Three groups) determine 21 in three test groups is adequate (effect size= 0.8; 1-β=.80; α=.05).

Design:Between-subject randomized study where each participant will complete a ≈1 ½ hour test session at the Department of Neurophysiology, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark. Each test session will include assessment of ongoing pain, experimental pain (thermal, mechanical, and chemical), and motor response latencies.

Procedure: Each test session proceeds as follow: First, participant is greeted in the entry hall at AUH and escorted to the examination room. Investigator goes through test procedures and introduce to assessments. Participant complete measures of ongoing pain followed by assessment of motor response latencies. Then, assessments of thermal heat detection, pain thresholds and pain-autonomic interactions on volar forearm. Next, sites of inducement of mechanical and chemical pain (randomized gluteus medius muscle, tibialis anterior muscle, and infraspinatus muscle) will be identified by use of manual palpation and defined by distinct anatomical landmarks marked with a pen. For each site: assessment of mechanical pain threshold followed by evaluation of intensity and discomfort during pain suprathreshold. Then, inducement of chemical pain by use of hypertonic saline injections. Immediately after injection, evaluation of pain intensity and discomfort followed by assessment of sensory and affective verbal descriptions of pain and patient drawings of pain size and distribution. Finally, measures of pain intensity and discomfort during mechanical suprathreshold pressure on site of injection. There will be a 15 minutes interval between inducement of experimental pain in the three sites for the pain to cease. Investigator escorts participant to the entry hall and thank participant for taking part in the study.

Eligibility

Inclusion criteria

  • Group healthy volunteers: healthy subjects with no PD diagnosis
  • Group PD patients levodopa: Include PD patients treated with levodopa
  • Group PD patients DBS: Include PD patients with DBS Exclusion criteria
  • Known other neurological or medical disorders (e.g., stroke, neuropathy, diabetes) or other disorders with expected influence on experimental pain
  • Known dementia (a score <24 on the MoCA)
  • Known untreated depression (a score ≥15 on the Beck Depression Inventory)
  • Unable to cooperate
  • Treated with painkillers except paracetamol and NSAID (except if pain and treatment is ad-equately stable as evaluated by a doctor)

Study details

Pain, Parkinson Disease

NCT05981261

University of Aarhus

25 January 2024

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