AUTHOR=Frey Mona , Summers Allyson , Power Sarah D. , Duarte Felipe C. K. , De Carvalho Diana E. TITLE=Is there a difference between heat-capsaicin induced low back pain and placebo for neural oscillations and inflammatory blood markers? An experimental randomized crossover study JOURNAL=Frontiers in Pain Research VOLUME=Volume 6 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pain-research/articles/10.3389/fpain.2025.1621810 DOI=10.3389/fpain.2025.1621810 ISSN=2673-561X ABSTRACT=PurposeLow back pain is difficult to study due to its heterogeneity. Inducing back pain experimentally, with an established model such as heat-capsaicin, would beneficially control for some variability. How heat-capsaicin affects neurophysiological factors relevant to back pain is currently unknown, therefore, this study used a randomized crossover design with the aim to explore the differences between heat-capsaicin and placebo on brain activity and blood markers.Methods18 healthy participants completed two sessions: heat-capsaicin (45°C heat + capsaicin) and placebo (reduced heat + placebo). Pre- and post-pain-induction/placebo, electroencephalogram and blood draws were taken, and perceived pain was rated with a 100 m visual analog scale. Band power was calculated for theta (4–8 Hz), alpha (8–13 Hz), beta (13–30 Hz), gamma1 (30–58 Hz), and gamma2 (62–100 Hz) for six brain regions. An immune assay was run on plasma in duplicate for cytokines IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, and TNFα. A repeated measures ANCOVA was run for all variables comparing between conditions (heat-capsaicin, placebo) with baseline measures as covariates. A Pearson's correlation was used to determine the relationship between perceived pain ratings and brain wave and blood biomarkers.ResultsThe heat-capsaicin model induced transient mild to moderate pain which was significantly higher than placebo (24.50 vs. 0.39; p < 0.001). Brain wave and blood biomarkers were not significantly different between heat-capsaicin and placebo (p ≥ 0.05) or correlated to perceived pain ratings (p ≥ 0.15).ConclusionLevels of perceived pain did not relate to neurophysiological changes that may occur immediately after heat-capsaicin exposure. Although changes have been found with other pain models and clinical low back pain, a statistically significant systematic response was not measurable using blood cytokine markers immediately after pain induction and may take longer to develop.