Artículo de revista
Classical conditioning and pain: Conditioned analgesia and hyperalgesia
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Acta Psychologica 145 (2014) 10–20
DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.10.009
Autor
Miguez, Gonzalo
Laborda Rojas, Mario
Miller, Ralph R.
Institución
Resumen
This article reviews situations in which stimuli produce an increase or a decrease in nociceptive responses
through basic associative processes and provides an associative account of such changes. Specifically, the literature
suggests that cues associated with stress can produce conditioned analgesia or conditioned hyperalgesia,
depending on the properties of the conditioned stimulus (e.g., contextual cues and audiovisual cues vs. gustatory
and olfactory cues, respectively) and the proprieties of the unconditioned stimulus (e.g., appetitive, aversive,
or analgesic, respectively). When such cues are associated with reducers of exogenous pain (e.g., opiates), they
typically increase sensitivity to pain. Overall, the evidence concerning conditioned stress-induced analgesia,
conditioned hyperalagesia, conditioned tolerance tomorphine, and conditioned reduction ofmorphine analgesia
suggests that selective associations between stimuli underlie changes in pain sensitivity.