151. Sex differentiated responses to intranasal trigeminal stimuli.
- Author
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Lundström JN, Frasnelli J, Larsson M, and Hummel T
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Electric Stimulation methods, Female, Humans, Male, Odorants, Olfactory Pathways physiology, Pain etiology, Pain physiopathology, Pain Measurement methods, Psychophysics, Reaction Time physiology, Stimulation, Chemical, Trigeminal Nerve physiology, Carbon Dioxide pharmacology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Olfactory Pathways drug effects, Sex Characteristics, Trigeminal Nerve drug effects
- Abstract
The aim of the study was to address sex-related hemispheric differences in trigeminal event-related potentials while controlling for the subjects' olfactory sensitivity. Event-related potentials to lateralized stimulation using the trigeminal stimulant CO(2) were recorded in 28 healthy young subjects (16 women). There was no sex-related difference in olfactory sensitivity. Results indicated a sex-differentiated response to trigeminally induced pain. Women were found to have generally higher amplitudes and shorter latencies of the late positive component than men. Moreover, men and women exhibited different hemispheric activations in that women expressed shorter latencies over the left hemisphere than men. The pronounced sex-related difference of the late positive component suggests a cognitive/emotional impact on the processing of intranasal pain as indicated by others.
- Published
- 2005
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