Effect of Experimental Periodontal Ligament Pain on Gingival Somatosensory Sensitivity Show others and affiliations
2017 (English) In: JOURNAL OF ORAL & FACIAL PAIN AND HEADACHE, ISSN 2333-0384, Vol. 31, no 1, p. 72-79Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Aims: To use a randomized, blinded, crossover design to evaluate the possible heterotopic effects of experimental periodontal ligament pain on adjacent gingival somatosensory sensitivity. Methods: A total of 12 healthy volunteers (8 female, 4 male; mean age standard error in means (SEM): 28 1 years) participated in two randomized experimental quantitative sensory testing (QST) sessions, one in which capsaicin (experimental) was injected into the periodontal ligament and one in which isotonic saline (control) was injected. A total of 13 standardized QST measures were obtained on the buccal attached gingiva of a maxillary central incisor before, immediately after, and 30 minutes after injection of 30 mu L of 5% capsaicin or isotonic saline into the periodontal ligament of the same incisor. The injection-evoked pain was evaluated on a 0-10 numeric rating scale (NRS). QST data were analyzed with two-way repeated measurement analysis of variance. Results: Capsaicin injected into the periodontal ligament evoked moderate levels of pain (mean peak NRS SEM: capsaicin: 5.5.7; control: 0.6 0.5 [P < .001]). Capsaicin injected into the periodontal ligament significantly modulated gingival somatosensory sensitivity: increased sensitivity to warmth and painful heat stimuli occurred immediately and 30 minutes after the injection (P < .025), whereas decreased sensitivity to both tactile and painful mechanical stimuli (P < .011) occurred immediately after the injection and to painful mechanical stimuli only after 30 minutes (P = .016). No somatosensory changes were detected following the injection of isotonic saline (P > .050). Conclusion: Capsaicin injected into the periodontal ligament caused gain of heterotopic somatosensory sensitivity toward warmth and painful heat stimuli as well as reduction in mechanical sensitivity of the gingiva adjacent to the injected tooth. These findings may have implications for interpretation of somatosensory functions in patients with chronic intraoral pain, where gingival somatosensory profiles similar to those detected after capsaicin injection in the present study may be interpreted as signs of nerve damage.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages Quintessence , 2017. Vol. 31, no 1, p. 72-79
Keywords [en]
capsaicin, intraoral QST, pain mechanisms, periodontal ligament, somatosensory
National Category
Dentistry
Identifiers URN: urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-6958 DOI: 10.11607/ofph.1765 ISI: 000393626700009 PubMedID: 28118423 Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85012186721 Local ID: 23483 OAI: oai:DiVA.org:mau-6958 DiVA, id: diva2:1403912
2020-02-282020-02-282024-06-17 Bibliographically approved