Analgesia to painful stimuli in affective illness

Abstract
Patients with bipolar and unipolar affective illness (N = 76) were compared with 48 control subjects on a psychophysical pain rating procedure using both threshold and signal detection analysis. Affectively ill patients were more analgesic than controls, and depressed men were significantly more analgesic than depressed women or control subjects. Bipolar men showed a different pattern of analgesia than unipolar patients. Pain appreciation in depressed patients may be related to endogenous opiate-like substances; this could be assessed in narcotic antagonist studies of pain-tolerant depressed subjects.