Our aims were to investigate gender differences to multimodal stimulations of the esophagus after experimentally induced sensitization. Thirty healthy age-matched subjects, 13 males and 17 females, were included. Pain evoked by mechanical and thermal stimuli was assessed before and after perfusion of the lower esophagus with 0.1 N hydrochloric acid. Males were more sensitive to the baseline mechanical stimuli (P < 0.01) and tolerated a lower volume of acid (P = 0.04). After acid perfusion, males were more sensitive than females to distensions (cross-sectional area P = 0.001 and volume P = 0.001). Acid perfusion sensitized both males (P = 0.03) and females (P = 0.04) to heat stimulation but not to cold stimulation (males, P = 0.09; females, P = 0.8). The referral areas for pain evoked by mechanical and thermal stimuli were larger in females compared with males both before and after acid perfusion (P = 0.002). In females only the referred pain area increased to heat stimulations (P = 0.02). Acid infusion resulted in a more hyperreactive esophagus (P = 0.03) but the hyperreactivity was not gender-dependent. In conclusion, males were more sensitive to mechanical and chemical esophageal stimuli and showed acid-evoked mechanical hyperalgesia. Females had significantly larger referred pain areas to the stimulations. The differentiated response to peripheral and central pain mechanisms may explain the gender-related differences seen in several gastrointestinal disorders.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10620-005-3006-xDOI Listing

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