Effect of Phasic Experimental Pain Applied during Motor Preparation or Execution on Motor Performance and Adaptation in a Reaching Task: A Randomized Trial
Laïla Badr, Léandre Gagné-Pelletier, Hugo Massé-Alarie, Catherine Mercier

TL;DR
This study found that acute pain during movement preparation or execution affects movement performance but not motor learning or memory.
Contribution
The novel contribution is evaluating how phasic pain during specific motor phases impacts sensorimotor adaptation and retention.
Findings
Pain during motor preparation shortened reaction time, while pain during execution reduced task performance.
Pain did not affect motor adaptation or retention when baseline effects were accounted for.
All groups showed significant improvements in motor variables for adaptation and retention.
Abstract
Musculoskeletal conditions often involve pain related to specific movements. However, most studies on the impact of experimental pain on motor performance and learning have used tonic pain models. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of experimental phasic pain during the preparation or execution of a reaching task on the acquisition and retention of sensorimotor adaptation. Participants were divided into three groups: no pain, pain during motor preparation, and pain during motor execution. Pain was induced over the scapula with a laser while participants performed a force field adaptation task over two days. To assess the effect of pain on motor performance, two baseline conditions (with or without pain) involving unperturbed pointing movements were also conducted. The results indicated that the timing of the nociceptive stimulus differently affected baseline movement performance.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle activation and electromyography studies · Motor Control and Adaptation · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation
