Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2732031 | The Journal of Pain | 2014 | 11 Pages |
Chronic myofascial pain syndrome has been related to defective descending inhibitory systems. Twenty-four females aged 19 to 65 years with chronic myofascial pain syndrome were randomized to receive 10 sessions of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) (n = 12) at 10 Hz or a sham intervention (n = 12). We tested if pain (quantitative sensory testing), descending inhibitory systems (conditioned pain modulation [quantitative sensory testing + conditioned pain modulation]), cortical excitability (TMS parameters), and the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) would be modified. There was a significant interaction (time vs group) regarding the main outcomes of the pain scores as indexed by the visual analog scale on pain (analysis of variance, P < .01). Post hoc analysis showed that compared with placebo-sham, the treatment reduced daily pain scores by −30.21% (95% confidence interval = −39.23 to −21.20) and analgesic use by −44.56 (−57.46 to −31.67). Compared to sham, rTMS enhanced the corticospinal inhibitory system (41.74% reduction in quantitative sensory testing + conditioned pain modulation, P < .05), reduced the intracortical facilitation in 23.94% (P = .03), increased the motor evoked potential in 52.02% (P = .02), and presented 12.38 ng/mL higher serum BDNF (95% confidence interval = 2.32–22.38). No adverse events were observed. rTMS analgesic effects in chronic myofascial pain syndrome were mediated by top-down regulation mechanisms, enhancing the corticospinal inhibitory system possibly via BDNF secretion modulation.PerspectiveHigh-frequency rTMS analgesic effects were mediated by top-down regulation mechanisms enhancing the corticospinal inhibitory, and this effect involved an increase in BDNF secretion.