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Assessment of pain quality reveals distinct differences between nociceptive innervation of low back fascia and muscle in humans

Andreas Schilder, Walter Magerl, Thomas Klein, Rolf-Detlef Treede
Key takeaways
  1. 01Pain from fascia and muscle has a different quality
  2. 02Fascial pain is often described as sharp or burning
  3. 03Muscle pain is more often described as deep or throbbing
  4. 04Fascial pain descriptions resemble those for skin pain
  5. 05May help target treatments for low back pain

People describe low back fascial pain differently than muscle pain, using words like 'burning' or 'stinging' for fascia.

Abstract

Introduction/objectives: Verbal descriptors are an important pain assessment parameter. The purpose of this study was to explore the ability to discriminate deep muscle pain and overlying fascia pain according to verbal descriptors and compare the pattern with skin stimulation (from previously published data).

Methods: In 16 healthy human subjects, electrical stimulation was chosen to excite a broad spectrum of nociceptive primary afferents innervating the respective tissues. The 24-item Pain Perception Scale (Schmerzempfindungsskala [SES]) was used to determine the induced pain quality.

Results: Overall, affective (P = 0.69) and sensory scores (P = 0.07) were not significantly different between muscle and fascia. Factor analysis of the sensory descriptors revealed a stable 3-factor solution distinguishing superficial thermal ("heat pain" identified by the items "burning," "scalding," and "hot") from superficial mechanical ("sharp pain" identified by the items "cutting," "tearing," and "stinging") and "deep pain" (identified by the items "beating," "throbbing," and "pounding"). The "deep pain" factor was more pronounced for muscle than fascia (P < 0.01), whereas the other 2 factors were more pronounced for fascia (both P < 0.01). The patterns of skin and fascia matched precisely in sensory factors and on single-item level.

Conclusion: The differences in sensory descriptor patterns between muscle and fascia may potentially guide treatment towards muscle or fascia in low back pain physiotherapeutic regimes. The similarity of descriptor patterns between fascia and skin, both including the terms "burning" and "stinging," opens the possibility that neuropathic back pain (when the dorsal ramus of the spinal nerve is affected) may be confused with low back pain of fascia origin.

Cite this study
APA
Andreas Schilder, Walter Magerl, Thomas Klein, & Rolf-Detlef Treede (2018). Assessment of pain quality reveals distinct differences between nociceptive innervation of low back fascia and muscle in humans. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/assessment-of-pain-quality-reveals-distinct-differences-between-nociceptive-innervation-of-low-back-fascia-and-muscle-in-humans/
MLA
Andreas Schilder, et al. "Assessment of pain quality reveals distinct differences between nociceptive innervation of low back fascia and muscle in humans." 2018, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/assessment-of-pain-quality-reveals-distinct-differences-between-nociceptive-innervation-of-low-back-fascia-and-muscle-in-humans/.
Chicago
Andreas Schilder et al. 2018. "Assessment of pain quality reveals distinct differences between nociceptive innervation of low back fascia and muscle in humans.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/assessment-of-pain-quality-reveals-distinct-differences-between-nociceptive-innervation-of-low-back-fascia-and-muscle-in-humans/