Background: The lack of pain alarm in painless myocardial infarction (MI) leads to increased morbidity and mortality, since patients do not seek medical treatment in a timely manner. We aimed to explore whether reduced systemic pain perception in response to experimental stimuli and pain related personality variables characterizes painless MI patients.
Methods: Level of chest pain intensity was assessed by numerical scale, range from 0 (no pain) to 100 (maximal pain). Heat pain threshold, magnitude estimation of supra-threshold phasic and tonic painful stimuli as well as anxiety and pain catastrophizing scores were assessed in 92 acute MI patients; 67 with and 25 without chest pain, respectively. All experimental stimuli were performed by Thermal Sensory Analysis (TSA) and applied to the right forearm.
Results: Greater intensity of chest pain scores was inversely correlated with lower pain threshold (r=-0.417, p<0.001), and directly associated with higher pain scores in response to the heat pain (r=0.354, p=0.002). Patients with painful MI demonstrated lower pain threshold (41.9+/-3.6 degrees C vs. 44.9+/-3.8 degrees C, p=0.001) and higher catastrophizing level (10.6+/-12.0 vs. 5.4+/-8.8, p=0.032). Logistic regression analysis revealed that older age and lower pain scores in response to supra-threshold painful stimuli were associated with greater risk for painless MI. The demographic variables, history of ischemic heart, risk factors for coronary artery disease, ST-T segment changes on ECG and troponin levels were similar in both groups.
Conclusions: This study suggests that reduced systemic pain perception as well as cognitive personality variables play an important role in the etiology of painless MI.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00192790.