Clinically feasible TENS-pressure-cuff paradigm for conditioned pain modulation

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers

Publication date

Authors

Beltrá López, Patricia
Suso Martín, Luis
Martín San Agustín, Rodrigo
Delicado Miralles, Miguel
Velasco, Enrique

Advisors

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SDG

goal-3
goal-9

Metrics

Google Scholar

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) assesses the attenuation of pain when a concurrent noxious stimulus is applied and is linked to prognosis in pain syndromes. Clinical implementation remains constrained by response variability and equipment requirements. The objective of this study was to assess the feasibility, variability, and reliability of a novel, user-friendly transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS)-pressure-cuff CPM paradigm and compare it to a conventional algometry-pressure-cuff paradigm. A TENS-pressure-cuff paradigm is a suitable approach for assessing CPM. Its variability and inter-session reliability are comparable to a conventional algometry-pressure-cuff paradigm, while exhibiting higher inter-rater reliability and sensitivity to detect inhibitory CPM responses. Further research should evaluate the utility of this paradigm in pathological populations.

Description

Keywords

Bibliographic reference

Beltrá, P., Suso-Martí, L., Martín-San Agustín, R., Delicado-Miralles, M., & Velasco, E. (2026). Clinically feasible TENS–pressure-cuff paradigm for conditioned pain modulation. Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine, rapm-2025-107402. https://doi.org/10.1136/rapm-2025-107402

Type of document