1. Negative affectivity predicts decreased pain tolerance during low-grade inflammation in healthy women.
- Author
-
Lacourt TE, Houtveen JH, Veldhuijzen van Zanten JJ, Bosch JA, Drayson MT, and Van Doornen LJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Humans, Salmonella typhi, Vaccination, Young Adult, Affect, Inflammation psychology, Pain Threshold psychology, Stress, Psychological
- Abstract
Introduction: Experimental animal studies provided evidence for a synergistic effect of immunological and psychological stressors on subsequent sickness behaviours. Up to now, little corroborating evidence for such synergy exists for humans, in whom it may provide a mechanism leading to the expression of functional somatic symptoms. The aim of the present study was to determine an interaction between stress(-vulnerability) and an immunological activation on experimental pain sensitivity, i.e., pressure pain threshold and tolerance in healthy humans., Methods: In healthy female participants (n=25, mean age 22.3 years), negative affectivity (NA) and experienced stress were assessed by questionnaire before receiving a Salmonella typhi vaccine or saline control in a randomized blinded cross-over design. Pressure pain threshold was assessed at the lower back and calves and pain tolerance was assessed at the thumbnail, before and six hours after each injection., Results: Vaccination induced leukocytosis (+100%) and increased serum IL-6 (+670%). NA predicted decreased pain tolerance after vaccination (β=-.57, p=.007), but not after placebo (β=.25, p=.26). Post-hoc analyses also demonstrated an association with administration order., Discussion: NA moderated the effects of inflammation on pain tolerance. This finding is consistent with a synergistic model whereby inflammation may lower the threshold for pain reporting in individuals with increased vulnerability for somatic symptom reporting., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF