Tim Brunson DCH

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Effect of Hypnosis on Pain and Blink Reflexes in Patients With Painful

FULL TITLE: Effect of Hypnosis on Pain and Blink Reflexes in Patients With Painful Temporomandibular Disorders.

OBJECTIVE: This study contrasted the effect of hypnosis on self-reported pain and changes in a nociceptive brainstem reflex, the blink reflex (BR), in 39 women with temporomandibular disorder. METHODS: The patients were randomized to hypnosis or control (nonhypnotic relaxation). Pain intensity was assessed 3 times daily on a 0 to 10 numerical rating scale. BRs were elicited by electrical stimulation with a nociceptive-specific electrode and recorded before and after treatment at pain threshold (Ip) and supra threshold (2×Ip). RESULTS: Significant reduction of pain intensity was observed in the hypnosis group from 4.5±2.1 at baseline to 2.9±2.4 after treatment (P<0.001). The pain reduction was generally unrelated to changes in the BR, with the exception being a lowered ipsilateral R2 BR component at the right side supra threshold (P=0.034). CONCLUSIONS: Hypnosis thus seems to reduce complex temporomandibular disorder pain, most likely because of cortical changes with little, if any, involvement of brainstem reflex pathways.

Clin J Pain. 2010 Dec 20. Abrahamsen R, Baad-Hansen L, Zachariae R, Svensson P. *Department of Clinical Oral Physiology, School of Dentistry, Aarhus University †Psychooncology Research Unit ‡Department of Oral Maxillofacial Surgery §MindLab, Center for Functionally Integrative Neuroscience (CFIN), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark.

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