Impact of Music on First Pain and Temporal Summation of Second Pain: A Psychophysical Pilot Study

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Abstract

PASSIVE MUSIC LISTENING HAS SHOWN ITS capacity to soothe pain in several clinical and experimental studies. This phenomenon-known as musicinduced analgesia-could partly be explained by the modulation of pain signals in response to the stimulation of brain and brainstem centers. We hypothesized that music-induced analgesia may involve inhibitory descending pain systems. We assessed pain-related responses to endogenous pain control mechanisms known to depend on descending pain modulation: Peak of first pain (PP), temporal summation (TS), and diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC). Twenty-seven healthy participants (14 men, 13 women) were exposed to a conditioned pain modulation paradigm during a 20-minute relaxing music session and a silence condition. Pain was continually measured with a visual analogue scale. Pain ratings were significantly lower with music listening (p < .02). Repeated measures ANOVA indicated significant differences between conditions within PP and TS (p < .05) but not in DNIC. Those findings suggested that music listening could strengthen components of the inhibitory descending pain pathways operating at the dorsal spinal cord level.

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Cabon, M., Fur-Bonnabesse, A. L., Genestet, S., Quinio, B., Misery, L., Woda, A., & Bodéré, C. (2021). Impact of Music on First Pain and Temporal Summation of Second Pain: A Psychophysical Pilot Study. Music Perception, 38(3), 267–281. https://doi.org/10.1525/MP.2021.38.3.267

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