JMIR Biomed Eng. 2025 Aug 20;10:e70938. doi: 10.2196/70938.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Accurately assessing pain severity is essential for effective pain treatment and desirable patient outcomes. In clinical settings, pain intensity assessment relies on self-reporting methods, which are subjective to individuals and impractical for noncommunicative or critically ill patients. Previous studies have attempted to measure pain objectively using physiological responses to an external pain stimulus, assuming that the participant is free of internal body pain. However, this approach does not reflect the situation in a clinical setting, where a patient subjected to an external pain stimulus may already be experiencing internal body pain.
OBJECTIVE: This study investigates the hypothesis that an individual’s physiological response to external pain varies in the presence of preexisting pain.
METHODS: We recruited 39 healthy participants aged 22-37 years, including 23 female and 16 male participants. Physiological signals, electrodermal activity, and electromyography were recorded while participants were subject to a combination of preexisting heat pain and cold pain stimuli. Feature engineering methods were applied to extract time-series features, and statistical analysis using ANOVA was conducted to assess significance.
RESULTS: We found that the preexisting pain influences the body’s physiological responses to an external pain stimulus. Several features-particularly those related to temporal statistics, successive differences, and distributions-showed statistically significant variation across varying preexisting pain conditions, with P values <.05 depending on the feature and stimulus.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that preexisting pain alters the body’s physiological response to new pain stimuli, highlighting the importance of considering pain history in objective pain assessment models.
PMID:40834427 | DOI:10.2196/70938