Département de Psychologie, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3C 3J7.
J Neurosci. 2013 Apr 17;33(16):6826-33. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4584-12.2013.
Individual differences in pain sensitivity and reactivity are well recognized but the underlying mechanisms are likely to be diverse. The phenomenon of stress-induced analgesia is well documented in animal research and individual variability in the stress response in humans may produce corresponding changes in pain. We assessed the magnitude of the acute stress response of 16 chronic back pain (CBP) patients and 18 healthy individuals exposed to noxious thermal stimulations administered in a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment and tested its possible contribution to individual differences in pain perception. The temperature of the noxious stimulations was determined individually to control for differences in pain sensitivity. The two groups showed similar significant increases in reactive cortisol across the scanning session when compared with their basal levels collected over 7 consecutive days, suggesting normal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis reactivity to painful stressors in CBP patients. Critically, after controlling for any effect of group and stimulus temperature, individuals with stronger cortisol responses reported less pain unpleasantness and showed reduced blood oxygenation level-dependent activation in nucleus accumbens at the stimulus onset and in the anterior mid-cingulate cortex (aMCC), the primary somatosensory cortex, and the posterior insula. Mediation analyses indicated that pain-related activity in the aMCC mediated the relationship between the reactive cortisol response and the pain unpleasantness. Psychophysiological interaction analysis further revealed that higher stress reactivity was associated with reduced functional connectivity between the aMCC and the brainstem. These findings suggest that acute stress modulates pain in humans and contributes to individual variability in pain affect and pain-related brain activity.
个体在疼痛敏感性和反应性方面的差异是众所周知的,但潜在的机制可能是多种多样的。在动物研究中,应激诱导镇痛的现象得到了很好的证明,而人类对应激反应的个体差异可能会导致疼痛的相应变化。我们评估了 16 名慢性背痛(CBP)患者和 18 名健康个体在功能磁共振成像实验中暴露于有害热刺激时的急性应激反应程度,并测试了其对疼痛感知个体差异的可能贡献。有害刺激的温度是根据个体确定的,以控制疼痛敏感性的差异。与连续 7 天采集的基础水平相比,两组在扫描过程中均表现出明显的应激性皮质醇反应性增加,这表明 CBP 患者的下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴对疼痛应激有正常的反应性。至关重要的是,在控制任何组和刺激温度的影响后,皮质醇反应较强的个体报告的疼痛不愉快感较少,并且在刺激开始时和前扣带皮层(aMCC)、初级体感皮层和后岛叶中,血氧水平依赖激活减少。中介分析表明,aMCC 中的疼痛相关活动介导了应激反应性与疼痛不愉快之间的关系。心理生理相互作用分析进一步表明,较高的应激反应性与 aMCC 与脑干之间的功能连接减少有关。这些发现表明,急性应激会调节人类的疼痛,并导致疼痛情感和与疼痛相关的大脑活动的个体差异。