Letters to the Editor Fillingim, Roger B; Edwards, Robert R; Doleys, Daniel M
The Clinical journal of pain,
2002-March/April, Letnik:
18, Številka:
2
Journal Article
Recent evidence suggests that a past history of physical and/or sexual abuse is more frequently reported among chronic pain populations; however, the prevalence of reported abuse has not been ...examined in patients with chronic orofacial pain caused by temporomandibular disorders (TMD). This study compares reported physical/sexual abuse among female TMD subjects recruited from the general population with that of age-matched female control subjects. The association of reported abuse with clinical pain, experimental pain responses, and psychologic variables was examined in the TMD group. Results indicated that a slightly but not statistically greater percentage of TMD subjects (44.8%) reported a history of sexual or physical abuse compared to control subjects (33.3%). Reported abuse among TMD subjects was not related to clinical pain or psychologic variables. Regarding experimental pain responses, TMD subjects reporting a history of abuse exhibited longer ischemic pain tolerances compared to those not reporting abuse; however, the groups did not differ on other experimental pain measures. Results indicate that the reported prevalence of physical/sexual abuse is similar among TMD subjects compared to other chronic pain populations; however, the relationship of abuse to clinical and psychosocial variables remains unclear.
Mental stress is associated with sympathetic adrenergic stimulation and concomitant increases in blood pressure and heart rate. Heritable individual differences in cardiovascular functional response ...to mental stress may arise from genetic variations in adrenergic receptors, which might produce excessive hemodynamic response to mental stress or create other conditions favoring the development of myocardial ischemia.
We examined the relationship between hemodynamic response to mental stress and mental stress-induced myocardial ischemia (MSIMI) and 5 common functional polymorphisms of beta1-adrenergic receptors (ADRB1 OMIM 109630, accession No. 153) and beta2-adrenergic receptors (ADRB2 OMIM 109690, accession No. 154). Participants were 148 patients (45 female 30.4%) with a documented history of coronary artery disease and a mean (SD) age of 64 (9) years. Patients were enrolled between December 9, 2004, and February 21, 2007. Mental stress was induced via a public-speaking task. Rest and stress myocardial perfusion imaging was performed. Blood samples were collected and genotyped for 5 common functional polymorphisms of ADRB1 (codons 49 and 389) and ADRB2 (codons 16 and 27 and nucleotide 523). The main outcome measures were hemodynamic and myocardial ischemic responses to mental stress. Mental stress-induced myocardial ischemia was defined as new or worsening perfusion defects during mental stress with a summed (stress to rest) difference score of at least 3.
A statistically significant difference was noted in the prevalences of MSIMI between genotype groups for codon 49 of ADRB1. Mental stress-induced myocardial ischemia occurred 3 times more frequently among patients homozygous for the Ser49 allele (31 of 104 patients 29.8%) compared with 4 of 39 patients (10.3%) among the Gly49 allele carriers (P=.02). The adjusted odds ratio for the effect of genotype (Ser/Ser vs Gly carriers) on MSIMI was 3.9 (95% confidence interval, 1.2-12.5) (P=.02).
Our findings indicate an association between a common genetic variation in ADRB1 and myocardial ischemic response to mental stress in patients with coronary artery disease. This polymorphic genetic marker may help identify patients at increased risk for mental stress-induced adverse outcomes.