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A Dose-Response Study of the Effects of Intravenous Midazolam on Cold Pressor-Induced Pain
28
Citations
19
References
1995
Year
Acute PainPain MedicinePharmacotherapyPain ExperienceDose-response StudyPain ManagementAnalgesicsAnesthetic PharmacologyHealth SciencesPsychiatryPostoperative Pain ManagementPerioperative PainNeuropharmacologyCold Pressor-induced PainPharmacologyPain ResearchAddictionPain ResponseAnesthesiaMedicineIntravenous MidazolamAnesthesiology
The effects of intravenous midazolam (0.75, 1.5, and 3 mg/70 kg) were examined and compared to that of fentanyl (0.1 mg/70 kg; positive control) and saline on pain induced by a cold pressor test. Both sensory and affective components of the pain response were assessed, as there is some evidence that benzodiazepines reduce the affective component. Healthy volunteers (three females, nine males) were enrolled in a prospective, double-blind, randomized, cross-over trial in which mood and psychomotor performance were also examined. Five minutes and 135 min postinjection, subjects immersed their forearm in ice-cold water for 3 min while assessments of pain were recorded. During the first immersion, subjects reported significantly lower pain intensity and bothersomeness ratings after having been injected with fentanyl, relative to the saline and midazolam conditions, which did not differ significantly from each other. Fentanyl and midazolam had prototypical mood altering and psychomotor impairing effects. We conclude that midazolam in our laboratory setting at the doses and route of administration studied had no effects on either the sensory or affective components of the pain experience.
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