Musculoskeletal Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A New Experimental Model of Acute Muscle Pain in Humans Based on Short-wave Diathermy
This study evaluates the use of short-wave diathermy (SWD) as an novel experimental model to induce transient and intensity-controlled muscle pain by heating muscle tissue.
Application of short-wave diathermy All researchers, students and postdocs involved in
experimental application of SWD will be properly trained by the Non-Ionizing Radiation
Research Group of the National University of Entre Ríos. The application of SWD will be
carried out by a CEC M-8 short-wave thermotherapy unit (CEC Electrónica, Córdoba, Argentina).
The device has capacitive applicators, that will be situated around the muscle to be
irradiated on top of a cotton towel, in order to absorb perspiration and avoid undesired
heating effects. Afterwards the emission mode (continuous or pulsed) will be selected, and
application of SWD will start. The intensity of SWD will be gradually increased until the
volunteer perceives a warm sensation, and once familiarized with this perception, the
intensity will be increased until a sensation of constant but tolerable pain is evoked. This
sensation will be maintained throughout the duration of the SWD application, estimated in
approximately 10 minutes. In case the volunteer feels excessive discomfort or does not
adequately tolerate the application of SWD, the device will be turned off immediately and the
experimental session will finish.
Experimental pain model assessment
- Model direct effects: maximum and average pain ratings will be assessed through a Visual
Analog Scale (VAS). The VAS ranges from 0 to 10, where 0 represents no perception, 3
represents the pain threshold (i.e. the minimum irradiation intensity that elicits pain)
and 10 represents the tolerance threshold (i.e. the irradiation intensity that elicits
an intolerable pain sensation). Duration of pain will also be recorded, in case the
experiment has to be interrupted before SWD application is completed and to assess
potential cases in which pain outlasts SWD application. Furthermore, delivered RF power
will be measured using a Bird 43 RF wattmeter (Bird Technologies, OH, USA).
- Pressure stimulation: pressure stimulation will be applied through a Somedic algometer
(Somedic SenseLab AB, Sweden), directly over the muscle being examined, using a 1 cm2
round tip. Pressure will be gradually increased from 0 kPA until a maximum of 1000 kPa
at a rate of approximately 30 kPa/s. Pressure pain threshold (PPT) will be defined as
the force at which the pressure sensation becomes painful. Pressure tolerance threshold
(PTT) will be defined as the force at which pressure sensation becomes intolerable. If
any of the threshold are not reached until the pressure is increased to 1000 kPa, the
this value will be considered as the corresponding threshold.
- Pinprick and tactile stimulation: pinprick stimuli will be applied on the skin over the
muscle being examined using a set of pinprick stimulators, consisting on a needle with a
0.25 mm tip linked to calibrated weights, ranging from 1 g to 50 g, in order to apply
forces between 8 and 500 mN approximately. Dynamic tactile stimulation will be applied
by stroking a cotton tip over the skin. Pinprick sensitivity (PS) and dynamic tactile
sensitivity (DTS) will be quantified using the VAS described above.
- Electrical stimulation: electrical stimuli will be applied to the skin over the muscle
being examined using a concentric electrode, in which the cathode is made of 16
stainless steel blunt pins with 0.2 mm diameter tips and 1 mm length, and the anode is a
concentric stainless steel ring of 20 mm diameter. The electrical stimulus will consist
on a rectangular pulse of 1 ms duration, generated by a Biopac STMISOLA constant-current
electrical stimulator (Biopac Systems Inc., California, USA). Stimulation intensity will
be increased from 1 mA in steps of 0.5 mA until a pain sensation is evoked. This
intensity will be defined as the electrical pain threshold (EPT). Once the EPT is
determined, repeated stimulation will be applied referenced to this intensity in order
to record somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) through surface electroencephalography
(EEG).
- Motor responses: motor responses will be recorded from upper and lower limbs. For the
upper limb, two sets of experimental motor tasks are planned, and the overall aim is to
measure changes in precision in the execution of the motor tasks due to pain. The first
one will be a simple task, basically consisting on the use of a joystick to move a
cursor to a two-dimensional moving target displayed in a computer screen. Specific
details of the implementation of the optimal setup for this motor task and the required
software will be provided by collaborators from the Physiology of Action Lab at
Universidad de Buenos Aires. The second motor task will involve more complex movements
and haptic feedback, provided by a Phantom Omni haptic device (SensAble Technologies,
Inc., Massachusetts, USA). The haptic device can provide controlled levels of force
feedback (up to 3.3 N) and a precise mapping of the trajectories employed in the motor
task in three dimensions (resolution: 0.055 mm). Specific details of the implementation
of the optimal setup for this motor task and the required software will be provided by
collaborators from the Robotics Research Group at National University of Entre Ríos. For
the lower limb, the motor task will consist on a balance task performed over
high-resolution pressure sensing platform that will be able to record differences in
weight loading between left and right leg and variations in the center of pressure
(CoP). The platform is a recent technological development from the Electronic
Prototyping and 3D Printing Lab at the Faculty of Engineering of National University of
Entre Ríos, and it has a sensing area of 430 x 320 mm, with a resolution of 4 pressure
sensors per cm2 and a measurement range from 1 to 785 kPa.
- Brain responses: EEG will be recorded using a Neuroscan SynAmps amplifier (Compumedics
Ltd., Victoria, Australia) during the planning and execution of motor tasks, in order to
evaluate changes in movement-related cortical potentials (MRCP) in relation to
SWD-induced pain (Jochumsen et al. 2015). Additionally, resting-state EEG will be
recorded before, during and after SWD application, in order to assess potential changes
in functional connectivity (FC) (Mayhew et al. 2013). FC analysis will be performed by
collaborators from CNAP at Aalborg University.
Sample size considerations
The experimental design is an interventional, pre-post study design (Thiese 2014), in which
each participant acts as his own control. Sample size calculation will be performed taking
into account the expected effect size that the model will have on the primary outcome (PPT).
Several experiments have shown that PPT in the wrist extensor/flexor muscles (e.g. extensor
carpi radialis longus) is around 350 ± 150 kPa (mean ± standard deviation), whereas PPT for
the ankle dorsiflexor muscles (e.g. tibialis anterior) is around 600 ± 250 kPa (Fischer 1987;
Delfa de la Morena et al. 2013). On the other hand, there is no existing information on the
expected size of the difference in PPT due to the application of SWD, so this value will be
approximated taking into account reference values of differences in PPT generated by other
experimental models of pain, such as the injection of hypertonic saline solution or delayed
onset muscle soreness. In these cases, PPT is usually reduced between 10 and 30% during the
effects of the model, so an average of 20% difference will be considered in order to
calculate the sample size for these experiments. Considering a probability of making a type I
error (α) of 5%, a statistical power (1 - β) of 80%, and an estimated correlation between
measures of 0.8, the sample size required to detect the aforementioned difference is 16
volunteers for the experiment in the upper limb and 17 volunteers for the experiment in the
lower limb. In order to account for an unexpectedly larger variation, 20 subjects are
expected to be recruited for each experiment.
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