Journal: European journal of pain (London, England)
Article Title: Hypercapnia Reduces Perceived Heat Pain in Healthy Subjects.
doi: 10.1002/ejp.70001
Figure Lengend Snippet: FIGURE 1 | Schematic of the participant setup. Left side: In-house-built wooden frame (hypercapnibar) with four Douglas bags, two for each mix- ture (normocapnic and hypercapnic) indicated by different colours (dark green and light brown). Bags of the same mixture are connected through three-way directional manual stopcocks, which are themselves connected by tubes to a central stopcock, from which another tube delivers the mix- ture to the oronasal face mask of the participant. Right side: Participant representation with three measuring sites of autonomic recordings. Oronasal face mask with sampling tube to monitor oxygen (O2) and carbondioxide (CO2), three electrodes on the torso (distally below left and below right clavicule and distally above right hip) for electrocardiography (ECG), one pair of electrodes at the left foot (attached to the big and middle toes) for recording galvanic skin response (GSR).
Article Snippet: They included threepoint electrocardiography (ECG; range: ±100 mV; FE231 Bio Amp, ADInstruments) from the upper torso using shielded lead wires (98 cm, MLA2503, ADInstruments) and stick- on disposable electrodes (MLA1010B, ADInstrument), galvanic skin response (GSR; range: ±40μS at 1 V to 20 μS conversion; FE116 GSR Amp, ADInstruments) from the foot (contralateral to the testing side) using bipolar electrodes (3 × 2.5 cm, MLT118F, ADInstruments) at the big and middle toes and oxygen/carbon dioxide concentrations (ML206 Gas Analyzer, ADInstruments).
Techniques: Sampling