University of South Australia and Neuroscience Research Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2012 Jul-Aug;26(6):646-52. doi: 10.1177/1545968311433209. Epub 2012 Feb 13.
Recent neuroscientific evidence has confirmed the important role of cognitive and behavioral factors in the development and treatment of chronic pain. Neuropathic and musculoskeletal pain are associated with substantial reorganization of the primary somatosensory and motor cortices as well as regions such as the anterior cingulate cortex and insula. What is more, in patients with chronic low back pain and fibromyalgia, the amount of reorganizational change increases with chronicity; in phantom limb pain and other neuropathic pain syndromes, cortical reorganization correlates with the magnitude of pain. These findings have implications for both our understanding of chronic pain and its prevention and treatment. For example, central alterations may be viewed as pain memories that modulate the processing of both noxious and nonnoxious input to the somatosensory system and outputs of the motor and other response systems. The cortical plasticity that is clearly important in chronic pain states also offers potential targets for rehabilitation. The authors review the cortical changes that are associated with chronic pain and the therapeutic approaches that have been shown to normalize representational changes and decrease pain and discuss future directions to train the brain to reduce chronic pain.
最近的神经科学证据证实了认知和行为因素在慢性疼痛的发展和治疗中的重要作用。神经病理性疼痛和肌肉骨骼疼痛与初级体感和运动皮层以及扣带前回和脑岛等区域的显著重组有关。更重要的是,在慢性腰痛和纤维肌痛患者中,随着慢性化,重组变化的程度增加;在幻肢痛和其他神经病理性疼痛综合征中,皮质重组与疼痛的程度相关。这些发现对我们理解慢性疼痛及其预防和治疗都有意义。例如,中枢改变可以被视为疼痛记忆,调节对体感系统和运动及其他反应系统的有害和非有害输入的处理。在慢性疼痛状态下明显重要的皮质可塑性也为康复提供了潜在的目标。作者综述了与慢性疼痛相关的皮质变化以及已显示可使代表性变化正常化并减轻疼痛的治疗方法,并讨论了训练大脑以减轻慢性疼痛的未来方向。