Abstract

BackgroundWhile chronic pruritus (CP) is a frequent symptom, many aspects of its underlying pathophysiological mechanisms still need elucidation. Research on sensory cutaneous function and on the influence of stress has been conducted mainly in patients with atopic dermatitis but is lacking for patients with CP.ObjectiveTo assess whether a standardized social stressor influences cutaneous sensory function in patients with CP in comparison with healthy controls (HC).MethodsCase–control study; 33 CP and 30 HC were submitted to the standardized quantitative sensory testing protocol before and after the Trier Social Stress Test and 1 h later. Intraepidermal nerve fibre density (IENFD) was determined.ResultsMechanical pain sensitivity and mechanical detection thresholds were significantly higher in CP than in HC, and mechanical detection thresholds increased more in CP than in HC over the three measurements. In both groups, cold pain threshold increased and heat pain threshold decreased from before to after the stress test and remained constant 1 h later. Only in CP, almost all QST tests induced at least a small amount of pruritus, which was not significantly altered by the stress test. IENFD in pruritic skin was significantly reduced in CP when compared to healthy controls.ConclusionPeripheral thermal sensory function was not altered in CP despite reduced IENFD in lesional skin, but we could demonstrate central sensitization processes specifically in CP and influences of an acute stressor inducing more sensitivity to thermal pain in both groups.

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