PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

To avoid pain during an injection, look away

Common advice really does reduce discomfort, study in Pain reports

2012-05-15
(Press-News.org) Philadelphia, PA, May 14, 2012 – Health professionals commonly say, "Don't look and it won't hurt" before administering an injection, but is there any scientific basis for the advice? A group of German investigators has found that, in fact, your past experience with needle pricks, along with information you receive before an injection, shape your pain experience. Their research is published in the May issue of Pain®.

"Throughout our lives, we repeatedly experience that needles cause pain when pricking our skin, but situational expectations, like information given by the clinician prior to an injection, may also influence how viewing needle pricks affects pain," says lead author Marion Höfle, a doctoral student in the research Multisensory Integration group led by Dr. Daniel Senkowski, at the Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin and the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf.

While watching video clips showing a needle pricking a hand, a Q-tip touching the hand, or a hand alone, study participants concurrently received painful or non-painful electrical stimuli applied to their own hand. The clips were presented on a screen located above the participants' hand, giving the impression that the hand on the screen belonged to them.

Participants reported that their pain was more intense and more unpleasant when they viewed a needle pricking a hand than when they saw a hand alone. In addition, observing needle pricks increased the unpleasantness of pain compared to viewing Q-tip touches. These findings were paralleled by enhanced activity of the autonomic nervous system, as measured by pupil dilation responses. This demonstrates that previous painful experiences with needles enhance unpleasantness of pain when viewing needle pricks.

Situational expectations also influenced perceived pain intensity. Prior to the stimulation, participants were told that either the needle or the Q-tip clip was more likely to be associated with painful than with non-painful electrical stimulation. The researchers found that presentation of clips that were more likely to be associated with pain lead to higher pain intensity experiences than the presentation of clips that were less likely to be associated with pain. This shows that expectations regarding the painfulness of medical treatments influence the intensity of pain that the treatment ultimately produces.

Taken together, the study reveals several important findings. "Clinicians may be advised to provide information that reduces a patient's expectation about the strength of forthcoming pain prior to an injection," Höfle notes. She further states that, "because viewing a needle prick leads to enhanced pain perception as well as to enhanced autonomic nervous system activity, we've provided empirical evidence in favor of the common advice not to look at the needle prick when receiving an injection."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Individuals with dementia more likely to die at home than in nursing homes

Individuals with dementia more likely to die at home than in nursing homes
2012-05-15
INDIANAPOLIS — A new study from the Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University has found that, at time of death, individuals with dementia are more likely to be living at home than in a nursing home. This contradicts the commonly held view that most individuals with dementia in the United States eventually move to nursing homes and die there. "Transitions in Care for Older Adults With and Without Dementia" appears online in advance of publication in the May 2012 issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. Most individuals with dementia, even advanced ...

Genes underlying the key domestication process in sorghum and other cereals

2012-05-15
A study by a team of university and government scientists led by a Kansas State University researcher, indicates that genes responsible for seed shattering -- the process by which grasses disseminate their seeds -- were under parallel selection during sorghum, rice and maize domestication. The study, "Parallel domestication of the Shattering1 genes in cereals," was published May 13 in the online version of the journal, Nature Genetics. In order to identify the molecular basis underlying seed shattering in sorghum, which is the world's fifth major crop, the researchers ...

Tilting cars on the assembly line: A new angle on protecting autoworkers

2012-05-15
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Letting autoworkers sit while they reach into a car's interior could help prevent shoulder and back strain - but another solution might be to tilt the entire car so that workers can stand up. That's the finding of two recent studies, which tested two ways to protect autoworkers from injury. Sitting on a cantilevered chair reduced the stress on the workers' backs and shoulders for three common installation tasks. But a different strategy - tilting a car sideways on a carriage so that workers could access the interior while standing - reduced the stress ...

Iowa State, Salk researchers make plant protein discovery that could boost bioeconomy

Iowa State, Salk researchers make plant protein discovery that could boost bioeconomy
2012-05-15
AMES, Iowa – Research groups from Iowa State University and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have uncovered the function of three plant proteins, a discovery that could help plant scientists boost seed oil production in crops, thereby benefitting the production of food, biorenewable chemicals and biofuels. The analysis of gene activity (by the Iowa group) and determination of protein structures (by the Salk group) independently identified in the model plant thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana) three related proteins that appear to be involved in fatty-acid metabolism. ...

Premiere Health Club, The Solebury Club in Doylestown, Offers New Member Special

2012-05-15
The Solebury Club (http://www.thesoleburyclub.com), which is co-owned by Rob DeAngelis, now has an exciting offer for new members. Those who decide to join will get the first month free and the initiation fee will be waived. The Solebury Club, which prides itself on its nationally ranked instructors, professional staff and expertly maintained premises, provides those in the Doylestown, PA, region a full range of gym-related activities supported by the latest workout equipment and much more. This premiere health club includes group instruction in kickboxing, karate, dance, ...

Look Ventures Announces Debut of Its All New Super Website Portal Predfrd.com

2012-05-15
Look Ventures LLC, a website development and management Company is pleased to announce the launch of their all new Universal Search Engine and Home Page Portal, Website http://www.prefrd.com. Prefrd.com offers a number of exciting and innovative new website features claims developer and CEO of Look Ventures, Cliff Livingstone. In particular, for the first time ever Prefrd.com allows viewers to search the Internet in their own Mother Tongue. Not even Google or Yahoo can do that. Prefrd.com's search capacity is alos very capable, offering many additional search related ...

Broward SCORE Hosts A Wide Range of Finance Workshops For Small Businesses

2012-05-15
Broward SCORE (http://www.broward.score.org) hosts a wide variety of workshops on the financial needs of small businesses in South Florida. The workshops help business owners find financing, manage their cash flow, budget and more. The workshops are held from 5 - 8 p.m. throughout the year at different venues in Broward County such as Best Buy, Comerica Bank, IKEA, Hispanic Unity of Florida among others. Workshop facilitators are SCORE volunteers with expertise in finance and business management. Facilitators include Paul Bosley of First Financial; Carla Dorsey ...

Study sheds new light on importance of human breast milk ingredient

2012-05-15
URBANA – A new University of Illinois study shows that human milk oligosaccharides, or HMO, produce short-chain fatty acids that feed a beneficial microbial population in the infant gut. Not only that, the bacterial composition adjusts as the baby grows older and its needs change. Even though HMO are a major component of human milk, present in higher concentration than protein, many of their actions in the infant are not well understood. Furthermore, they're virtually absent from infant formula. The scientists wanted to find out what formula-fed babies were missing. "We ...

DocVerify Releases New Easy Sign System for Instant Electronic Signatures on Any Website

2012-05-15
DocVerify has today announced the release of their powerful new Easy Sign System, designed to allow website owners the ability to integrate electronic signatures into their sites with no programming or HTML knowledge required. This offers website owners searching for a complete answer to their contract management or document management needs a simple, powerful, effective solution. The new Easy Sign System is designed to work with any website, and requires no HTML or coding knowledge from the website owner. According to DocVerify, "Easy Sign has been designed to ...

Color of robins' eggs determines parental care

2012-05-15
A male robin will be more diligent in caring for its young if the eggs its mate lays are a brighter shade of blue. Queen's University biology professor Bob Montgomerie has been studying robins on and off for 25 years and has a particular fascination with the bright blue colour of their eggs. To test a theory on the purpose of bright egg colouration, Dr. Montgomerie and MSc student Philina English, working at the Queen's University Biological Station (QUBS) and other sites around Kingston, replaced the real eggs in robins' nests with artificial eggs of different shades ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

High risk of readmission and death among heart failure patients

​​​​​​​Code for Earth launches 2026 climate and weather data challenges

Three women named Britain’s Brightest Young Scientists, each winning ‘unrestricted’ £100,000 Blavatnik Awards prize

Have abortion-related laws affected broader access to maternal health care?

Do muscles remember being weak?

Do certain circulating small non-coding RNAs affect longevity?

How well are international guidelines followed for certain medications for high-risk pregnancies?

New blood test signals who is most likely to live longer, study finds

Global gaps in use of two life-saving antenatal treatments for premature babies, reveals worldwide analysis

Bug beats: caterpillars use complex rhythms to communicate with ants

High-risk patients account for 80% of post-surgery deaths

Celebrity dolphin of Venice doesn’t need special protection – except from humans

Tulane study reveals key differences in long-term brain effects of COVID-19 and flu

The long standing commercialization challenge of lithium batteries, often called the dream battery, has been solved.​

New method to remove toxic PFAS chemicals from water

The nanozymes hypothesis of the origin of life (on Earth) proposed

Microalgae-derived biochar enables fast, low-cost detection of hydrogen peroxide

Researchers highlight promise of biochar composites for sustainable 3D printing

Machine learning helps design low-cost biochar to fight phosphorus pollution in lakes

Urine tests confirm alcohol consumption in wild African chimpanzees

Barshop Institute to receive up to $38 million from ARPA-H, anchoring UT San Antonio as a national leader in aging and healthy longevity science

Anion-cation synergistic additives solve the "performance triangle" problem in zinc-iodine batteries

Ancient diets reveal surprising survival strategies in prehistoric Poland

Pre-pregnancy parental overweight/obesity linked to next generation’s heightened fatty liver disease risk

Obstructive sleep apnoea may cost UK + US economies billions in lost productivity

Guidelines set new playbook for pediatric clinical trial reporting

Adolescent cannabis use may follow the same pattern as alcohol use

Lifespan-extending treatments increase variation in age at time of death

From ancient myths to ‘Indo-manga’: Artists in the Global South are reframing the comic

Putting some ‘muscle’ into material design

[Press-News.org] To avoid pain during an injection, look away
Common advice really does reduce discomfort, study in Pain reports