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Sex and age differences in mechanical, thermal and wetness perception across skin sites at risk of pressure ulcers: a quantitative sensory testing study

Sex and age differences in mechanical, thermal and wetness perception across skin sites at risk of pressure ulcers: a quantitative sensory testing study
Sex and age differences in mechanical, thermal and wetness perception across skin sites at risk of pressure ulcers: a quantitative sensory testing study

Pressure ulcers can be common in the elderly, and loss of sensation can play a fundamental role in the development of these injuries. The aim of this study was to assess the effects of age and sex on non-noxious thermal and wetness perception (via magnitude estimation), alongside pressure- and thermal-pain thresholds, at the heel, sternum and sacrum, which are skin sites typically at risk for pressure ulcers. A cross-sectional study was performed on 34 younger adults [15 females, 22.1 (1.7) years old] and 17 older adults [eight females, 55.5 (5.3) years old]. We found that: (1) pressure pain thresholds (F 2,24 = 16.60, P < 0.001) and heat pain thresholds (F 2,24 = 4.23, P = 0.027) differed in relationship to age, but only at the heel and sacrum, principally with higher thresholds in the older adults. Furthermore, when collapsed by skin site, we found that females had lower pressure pain thresholds (-157 kPa; P = 0.011) and heat pain thresholds (-1.54°C; P = 0.008) than males. Considering hygrosensation, it was typically higher in the young adults, and the heel was the skin site least sensitive to both thermal and hygrosensation. The results of this study indicate that sensory alterations could be present in skin sites at risk of pressure ulcers; in particular, the heel presented less intensity of sensations to painful and non-noxious stimuli. As such, according to these findings, male sex and age can result in reduced intensities of sensations, which might predispose to a higher risk of pressure ulcers, especially on the heel.

ageing, hygrosensation, pain, pressure injury, sex difference, thermal sensation
0958-0670
2553-2563
Martini, Miriam
fdaa0a35-d8b2-43f0-9014-89937334a67a
Ortis, Arianna
23ee773f-f354-4477-a341-98ff60912d26
Filingeri, Davide
42502a34-e7e6-4b49-b304-ce2ae0bf7b24
Worsley, Peter R.
44bc022c-0bea-4df9-bfb7-f3469992bfa1
Makuc, Evelin
d0286571-633a-4abf-9fd8-dff12e580f9c
Deodato, Manuela
09ac3d95-be9b-4a53-9a3e-20959fda8df0
Murena, Luigi
2f376747-d74b-4e5d-b4f4-a445dd233c29
Manganotti, Paolo
053b0917-efc3-4c67-a69f-3009f84961c6
Buoite Stella, Alex
5bcc50a8-f4a5-4182-9815-8da38d105df4
Martini, Miriam
fdaa0a35-d8b2-43f0-9014-89937334a67a
Ortis, Arianna
23ee773f-f354-4477-a341-98ff60912d26
Filingeri, Davide
42502a34-e7e6-4b49-b304-ce2ae0bf7b24
Worsley, Peter R.
44bc022c-0bea-4df9-bfb7-f3469992bfa1
Makuc, Evelin
d0286571-633a-4abf-9fd8-dff12e580f9c
Deodato, Manuela
09ac3d95-be9b-4a53-9a3e-20959fda8df0
Murena, Luigi
2f376747-d74b-4e5d-b4f4-a445dd233c29
Manganotti, Paolo
053b0917-efc3-4c67-a69f-3009f84961c6
Buoite Stella, Alex
5bcc50a8-f4a5-4182-9815-8da38d105df4

Martini, Miriam, Ortis, Arianna, Filingeri, Davide, Worsley, Peter R., Makuc, Evelin, Deodato, Manuela, Murena, Luigi, Manganotti, Paolo and Buoite Stella, Alex (2026) Sex and age differences in mechanical, thermal and wetness perception across skin sites at risk of pressure ulcers: a quantitative sensory testing study. Experimental Physiology, 111 (5), 2553-2563. (doi:10.1113/EP093190).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Pressure ulcers can be common in the elderly, and loss of sensation can play a fundamental role in the development of these injuries. The aim of this study was to assess the effects of age and sex on non-noxious thermal and wetness perception (via magnitude estimation), alongside pressure- and thermal-pain thresholds, at the heel, sternum and sacrum, which are skin sites typically at risk for pressure ulcers. A cross-sectional study was performed on 34 younger adults [15 females, 22.1 (1.7) years old] and 17 older adults [eight females, 55.5 (5.3) years old]. We found that: (1) pressure pain thresholds (F 2,24 = 16.60, P < 0.001) and heat pain thresholds (F 2,24 = 4.23, P = 0.027) differed in relationship to age, but only at the heel and sacrum, principally with higher thresholds in the older adults. Furthermore, when collapsed by skin site, we found that females had lower pressure pain thresholds (-157 kPa; P = 0.011) and heat pain thresholds (-1.54°C; P = 0.008) than males. Considering hygrosensation, it was typically higher in the young adults, and the heel was the skin site least sensitive to both thermal and hygrosensation. The results of this study indicate that sensory alterations could be present in skin sites at risk of pressure ulcers; in particular, the heel presented less intensity of sensations to painful and non-noxious stimuli. As such, according to these findings, male sex and age can result in reduced intensities of sensations, which might predispose to a higher risk of pressure ulcers, especially on the heel.

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Accepted/In Press date: 24 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2026
Keywords: ageing, hygrosensation, pain, pressure injury, sex difference, thermal sensation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510980
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510980
ISSN: 0958-0670
PURE UUID: c37eeb7e-fc2b-49bf-bddc-dbec0ad72a2c
ORCID for Davide Filingeri: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5652-395X

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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2026 16:45
Last modified: 07 May 2026 02:01

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Contributors

Author: Miriam Martini
Author: Arianna Ortis
Author: Peter R. Worsley
Author: Evelin Makuc
Author: Manuela Deodato
Author: Luigi Murena
Author: Paolo Manganotti
Author: Alex Buoite Stella

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