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Noninvasive bladder testing of adolescent females to assess visceral hypersensitivity
- Source :
- Pain
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Excess pain after visceral provocation has been suggested as a marker for chronic pelvic pain risk in women. However, few noninvasive tests have been validated that could be performed readily on youth in early risk windows. Therefore, we evaluated the validity and reliability of a noninvasive bladder pain test in 124 healthy premenarchal females (median age 11, [interquartile range 11-12]), as previously studied in adult women. We explored whether psychosocial, sensory factors, and quantitative sensory test results were associated with provoked bladder pain and assessed the relation of bladder pain with abdominal pain history. Compared with findings in young adult females (age 21 [20-28]), results were similar except that adolescents had more pain at first sensation to void (P = 0.005) and lower maximum tolerance volume (P < 0.001). Anxiety, depression, somatic symptoms, and pain catastrophizing predicted provoked bladder pain (P's < 0.05). Bladder pain inversely correlated with pressure pain thresholds (r = -0.25, P < 0.05), but not with cold pressor pain or conditioned pain modulation effectiveness. Bladder pain was also associated with frequency of abdominal pain symptoms (r = 0.25, P = 0.039). We found strong retest reliability for bladder pain at standard levels of sensory urgency in 21 adolescents who attended repeat visits at 6 to 12 months (intraclass correlations = 0.88-0.90). Noninvasive bladder pain testing seems reproducible in adolescent females and may predict abdominal pain symptomatology. Confirmation of our findings and further investigation of the bladder test across menarche will help establish how visceral sensitivity contributes to the early trajectory of pelvic pain risk.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Pain Threshold
Abdominal pain
medicine.medical_specialty
Adolescent
Provocation test
Urinary Bladder
Pelvic Pain
Article
Young Adult
Interquartile range
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Young adult
Bladder Pain
Child
business.industry
Pelvic pain
Reproducibility of Results
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Neurology
Anxiety
Pain catastrophizing
Female
Neurology (clinical)
medicine.symptom
Chronic Pain
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18726623
- Volume :
- 163
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Pain
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b61f9b4574c051c0ae184f0f06221f7a