Chronic Pain Alters Somatosensory Evoked Potentials and Paired-pulse Inhibition in Athlete
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Abstract
Injuries are inevitable for athletes, and when injuries end up causing chronic pain, they usually force athletes to withdraw from training. Chronic pain is known to be caused by plastic changes in the brain; thus, the purpose of this study was to assess the somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) and the paired-pulse inhibition (PPI) in athletes suffering from chronic pain as compared to pain-free athletes. Twenty track and field (T&F) athletes, that were also undergraduate students, were recruited for this study. These athletes (12 men; 8 women) were divided into two groups of 10 based on their self-reporting of actively experiencing chronic pain (defined as pain that persisted for more than 3 months) or not. Both SEP and PPI in the primary somatosensory cortex (SI) were elicited by constant current square-wave pulses (of 0.2 ms duration) that were delivered to the right median nerve by an electrical stimulator through a surface bar electrode with a cathode proximal. Paired-pulse stimulation was set at interstimulus intervals of 30 and 100 ms. Subjects were randomly presented with 1,500 single- and paired-pulse stimuli at 2 Hz. Our measurements demonstrated a trend toward a lower N20 and P25 amplitude as well as a disinhibition of the PPI_30 ms in the athletes suffering from chronic pain. These findings suggest that chronic pain may modulate excitatory and inhibitory function of the SI in athletes as well as in patients suffering from complex regional pain syndrome or fibromyalgia.
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