Abstract

Psychophysiological recordings (electrodermal activity, heart rate and frontalis and back muscle tension) were taken in chronic low back pain (CLBP) patients and control subjects during baseline conditions and during the presentation of six acute pressure pain stimuli. No baseline differences in back muscle tension between CLBP patients and controls were found, but CLBP patients did have higher baseline electrodermal activity. During pain stimulation, CLBP patients showed larger skin conductance reactions than controls. Also, the CLBP patient group showed a marked increase in lumbar muscle tension during the test compared to baseline, whereas the EMG level of the control group remained unchanged. This increase in muscle tension seemed to be more related to the postural change than to the pain stimulus, and it is hypothesized that some CLBP patients react with exaggerated and non-functional back muscle contractions to slight changes in posture. Contrary to expectation, no differences were found between CLBP patients and controls in physiological habituation after repeating the pain stimulus. Comparison of subjective pain ratings and psychophysiological variables showed that for control subjects arousal and subjective pain were related. For CLBP patients there was no such clear relationship.

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