Pain Meter Assesses Whiplash Injury
A computerised pain assessment system
may make it possible to establish a standardised way to quantify neck
pain resulting from whiplash injuries, researchers in Germany report.
The clinical evaluation of pressure pain tends to be
subjective and qualitative, Dr. Philipp Stude, of University of Essen,
and his colleagues point out in their article, published in the medical
journal Cephalalgia.
They used a computer-interactive pressure "algesimeter"
to standardise neck pain measurement in 23 drivers who had suffered whiplash
seven days earlier in a rear-end collision and compared the readings with
those obtained from 24 healthy "control" subjects.
The system applied a constant pressure to the left and
right splenius muscle at the side of the neck and to the left and right
trapezius muscle at the back of the neck and shoulder.
"We found increased pain expression parameters in
the acute stage of whiplash injury, where the left trapezii muscles were
more painful than the right ones, perhaps due to the drivers' position
in the car," co-author Dr. Katrina Nebel told Reuters Health.
Specifically, they observed a steep rise of the pain
intensity over time, indicating raised pressure pain in the patient group
but not the control group. The tolerance threshold was also reached more
rapidly within the whiplash group.
When subjects were retested, Nebel said, 10 percent to
20 percent of patients still had high levels of pressure pain 6 weeks
after the trauma.
Her group is now "examining which factors might
predict long-lasting symptoms" in whiplash injuries.
source: Reuters
(Last Updated: Wednesday 12 January, 2005)
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