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Journal ArticleDOI

Vestibular tactile and pain thresholds in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome

TLDR
The data imply that VVS may reflect a specific pathological process in the vestibular region, superimposed on systemic hypersensitivity to tactile and pain stimuli.
Abstract
Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) is a common cause of dyspareunia in pre-menopausal women. Little is known about sensory function in the vulvar vestibule, despite Kinsey's assertion that it is important for sexual sensation. We examined punctate tactile and pain thresholds to modified von Frey filaments in the genital region of women with VVS and age- and contraceptive-matched pain-free controls. Women with VVS had lower tactile and pain thresholds around the vulvar vestibule and on the labium minus than controls, and these results were reliable over time. Women with VVS also had lower tactile, punctate pain, and pressure-pain tolerance over the deltoid muscle on the upper arm, suggesting that generalized systemic hypersensitivity may contribute to VVS in some women. In testing tactile thresholds, 20% of trials were blank, and there was no group difference in the false positive rate, indicating that response bias cannot account for the lower thresholds. Women with VVS reported significantly more catastrophizing thoughts related to intercourse pain, but there was no difference between groups in catastrophizing for unrelated pains. Pain intensity ratings for stimuli above the pain threshold increased in a parallel fashion with log stimulus intensity in both groups, but the ratings of distress were substantially greater in the VVS group than in controls at equivalent levels of pain intensity. The data imply that VVS may reflect a specific pathological process in the vestibular region, superimposed on systemic hypersensitivity to tactile and pain stimuli.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Central Sensitivity Syndromes: A New Paradigm and Group Nosology for Fibromyalgia and Overlapping Conditions, and the Related Issue of Disease versus Illness

TL;DR: CSS seems to be a useful paradigm and an appropriate terminology for FMS and related conditions, and the disease-illness, as well as organic/non-organic dichotomy, should be rejected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overlapping Chronic Pain Conditions: Implications for Diagnosis and Classification.

TL;DR: This brief review describes the concept of COPCs and the putative mechanisms underlying COPCs, a mechanism-based heuristic model is presented and current knowledge and evidence for COPCs are presented and a set of recommendations are provided to advance the understanding of COPs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual sequelae of general medical disorders

TL;DR: Increased scientific understanding of the central and peripheral physiology of sexual response could help to identify the pathophysiology of sexual dysfunction from disease and medical interventions, and also to ameliorate or prevent some dysfunctions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vulvodynia: Definition, Prevalence, Impact, and Pathophysiological Factors

TL;DR: Longitudinal research is needed to shed light on risk factors involved in the expression of vulvodynia, as well as in potential subgroups of affected patients, in order to develop an empirically supported treatment algorithm.
Journal ArticleDOI

When sex hurts, anxiety and fear orient attention towards pain.

TL;DR: VVS sufferers reported hypervigilance for coital pain and exhibited a selective attentional bias towards pain stimuli on the emotional Stroop task as compared with controls, and this effect was predicted by state and trait anxiety and fear of pain.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Pain Catastrophizing Scale: Development and validation.

TL;DR: In this paper, the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) was administered to 425 undergraduates and a three component solution comprising (a) rumination, (b) magnification, and (c) helplessness.
Journal ArticleDOI

The McGill Pain Questionnaire: major properties and scoring methods.

TL;DR: The McGill Pain Questionnaire as discussed by the authors consists of three major classes of word descriptors (sensory, affective and evaluative) that are used by patients to specify subjective pain experience.
Journal Article

The McGill Pain Questionnaire: major properties and scoring methods.

Ronald Melzack
- 30 Aug 1975 - 
TL;DR: The data indicate that the McGill Pain Questionnaire provides quantitative information that can be treated statistically, and is sufficiently sensitive to detect differences among different methods to relieve pain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Textbook of pain

Patrick D. Wall, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1990 - 
TL;DR: Part 1 Basic aspects: peripheral - peripheral neural mechnaisms of nociception, the course and termination of primary afferent fibres, teh pathophysiology of damaged peripheral nerves, functional chemistry ofPrimary afferent neurons central - the dorsal horn.
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