Sex is one of biology's, that is, life's most potent
experimental variables. So, are there sex differences in pain? And
are these sex differences applicable clinically? The answer to both
questions is decidedly yes, of course. But we still have a long way to
go. We have much to learn from the study of females, making use of
the lifelong changes in their reproductive conditions as experimental
variables. We also have much to learn from animals, especially if we
apply what we know about their social lives. However, the challenge
in all of these studies is not first to look for some mythical
neurological entity called pain experience and then to learn how
sex modulates it, but rather to seek to understand the rules by
which sex influences all of biology's mutually modulatory
factors – social, psychological, physiological, cellular,
molecular, and genetic – that collectively create the
motivating circumstances we designate as pain. It appears
almost beyond doubt that on the one hand these factors interact
to make women more vulnerable to these circumstances than men,
but on the other hand that women have more varied mechanisms
for balance. Happily, the details of these sex differences at all
levels biological (social to genetic) are now emerging in a rapidly
growing body of literature that promises new insights into and
applications for the individual person, male or female, in persistent
pain.