KUMJ | VOL. 22 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 85 | JANUARY - MARCH
Effect of Humour on Pain Perception among Young Healthy Indian Adults Using Cold Pressor Task
Rhea OP, Savitha D, Anto T
Abstract: Background
Currently there is little research, especially in India, which has looked at the
physiological effects of humour on pain perception.
Objective
To compare pain sensitivity across the three arms of intervention (control, neutral
and funny videos). And to investigate the relationship between a) cardiovascular
responses across and within each arm, b) pain sensitivity and resting blood pressure,
pulse rate, c) humour trait with pain sensitivity.
Method
Subjects were exposed in random order to cold pressor task, during which they
either watched a ‘neutral video’ or ‘funny video’ or did not watch any video. During
the intervention, pain threshold and tolerance were recorded. Systolic and diastolic
blood pressure, and pulse rate were measured before and after intervention. Pain
unpleasantness was recorded post intervention.
Result
Neither humorous nor neutral videos had a significant effect on pain threshold,
tolerance and unpleasantness and cardiovascular responses. There was significant
difference between the pre and post values of cardiovascular measures within
neutral and funny video arms. In the ‘no video’ arm, negative correlations were
found between resting blood pressure and pain unpleasantness, and between delta
diastolic blood pressure and pain threshold. Humour trait and subject’s self-rating
of pain tolerance had no effect on both pain sensitivity and cardiovascular responses
to cold pain.
Conclusion
Humorous distraction had no effect on objective or subjective pain measures or
cardiovascular responses to cold pain exposure. There was a significant difference in
the pre-post values of cardiovascular measures within neutral and funny video arms.
Keyword : Cardiovascular responses, Cold pressor task, Humour, Pain perception