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Temporal changes in mechanical pin prick sensitivity following high frequency induced sensitisation of central nociceptive pathways: a test re-test reliability study

Created on 12 Jan 2026

Authors

Mugglestone, S., Ganis, G., Hughes, S.

Abstract

High-frequency stimulation (HFS) is a human surrogate model of secondary hyperalgesia and a key experimental tool for understanding the mechanisms and modulation of central nociceptive pathways. An emerging area of research focuses on the role of top-down endogenous analgesic systems during secondary hyperalgesia development. However, the test-retest reliability of the early temporal changes in sensitivity are poorly understood. In the present study, we investigated the between-session reliability of the early temporal dynamics and late-phase expression of HFS-induced changes in mechanical pinprick sensitivity in a heterotopic area on the volar forearm in 28 healthy participants across five time points relative to HFS conditioning: -15, 5, 20, 35, and 50 minutes. Homotopic changes in single-pulse electrically evoked responses were also assessed although no primary hyperalgesia was evident. Baseline conditioned pain modulation (CPM), temporal summation of pain (TSP), and state-trait anxiety (STAI) were also assessed to investigate potential influences on heterotopic and homotopic responses. The present findings demonstrate the consistent induction of mechanical pinprick secondary hyperalgesia by the end of the HFS window (50 minutes) across repeated test session. However, a distinct reduction in the development of sensitivity was present during session 2. Furthermore, pain during HFS conditioning, anxiety, CPM, and TSP demonstrated no influence on secondary hyperalgesia development and were inadequate to explain between-session variance. These results suggest that careful planning around experimental designs, and the counterbalancing of experimental conditions should be considered when investigating modulating factors over the development of secondary hyperalgesia. Further research into factors influencing habituation across sessions is needed.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 12 Jan 2026.

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