October 16, 2017

Gender, pain and dementia

Understanding sex differences in pain perception could lead to more targeted and effective pain assessment and management strategies in older adults with Alzheimer’s disease.

Men and women feel pain differently, and the same is true for people with Alzheimer’s disease.

In a report published last month in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, Todd Monroe, Ph.D., and his colleagues conclude that these differences will need to be considered in order to improve the detection, evaluation and treatment of pain in this vulnerable population.

The researchers used a standard questionnaire to determine the psychophysical responses to increasing heat applied to the hands of 14 men and 14 women aged 65 and older with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease. The women reported experiencing mild and moderate pain at markedly lower temperatures than did the men, but the men rated mild and moderate pain stimuli as more unpleasant.

While further studies are needed, these findings suggest that better understanding of the sex differences in the perception of pain could lead to more targeted and effective pain assessment and management strategies in older adults with Alzheimer’s disease, the researchers concluded.

This research was supported by the John A. Hartford Foundation, Mayday Fund, Vanderbilt Office of Clinical and Translational Scientist Development, Vanderbilt Clinical and Translational Research Scholars Program, and the National Institutes of Health (grants AG046379, AG045735).

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