Department of Neural and Pain Sciences, University of Maryland, School of Dentistry, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Pain. 2013 Dec;14(12):1573-84. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2013.07.020. Epub 2013 Oct 14.
Several studies have reported reduced cerebral gray matter (GM) volume or density in chronic pain conditions, but there is limited research on the plasticity of the human cortex in response to psychological interventions. We investigated GM changes after cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) in patients with chronic pain. We used voxel-based morphometry to compare anatomic magnetic resonance imaging scans of 13 patients with mixed chronic pain types before and after an 11-week CBT treatment and to 13 healthy control participants. CBT led to significant improvements in clinical measures. Patients did not differ from healthy controls in GM anywhere in the brain. After treatment, patients had increased GM in the bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal, posterior parietal, subgenual anterior cingulate/orbitofrontal, and sensorimotor cortices, as well as hippocampus, and reduced GM in supplementary motor area. In most of these areas showing GM increases, GM became significantly higher than in controls. Decreased pain catastrophizing was associated with increased GM in the left dorsolateral prefrontal and ventrolateral prefrontal cortices, right posterior parietal cortex, somatosensory cortex, and pregenual anterior cingulate cortex. Although future studies with additional control groups will be needed to determine the specific roles of CBT on GM and brain function, we propose that increased GM in the prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices reflects greater top-down control over pain and cognitive reappraisal of pain, and that changes in somatosensory cortices reflect alterations in the perception of noxious signals.
An 11-week CBT intervention for coping with chronic pain resulted in increased GM volume in prefrontal and somatosensory brain regions, as well as increased dorsolateral prefrontal volume associated with reduced pain catastrophizing. These results add to mounting evidence that CBT can be a valuable treatment option for chronic pain.
几项研究报告称,慢性疼痛状况下大脑灰质(GM)体积或密度减少,但关于人类大脑皮层对心理干预的可塑性的研究有限。我们研究了慢性疼痛患者认知行为疗法(CBT)后的 GM 变化。我们使用基于体素的形态测量法,比较了 13 名混合慢性疼痛类型患者在 11 周 CBT 治疗前后和 13 名健康对照参与者的解剖磁共振成像扫描。CBT 导致临床指标显著改善。患者在大脑任何部位的 GM 与健康对照组均无差异。治疗后,患者双侧背外侧前额叶、后顶叶、前扣带回/眶额皮质和感觉运动皮质以及海马区 GM 增加,而辅助运动区 GM 减少。在大多数显示 GM 增加的区域中,GM 明显高于对照组。疼痛灾难化的减少与左背外侧前额叶和腹外侧前额叶皮质、右后顶叶皮质、体感皮质和前扣带回皮质 GM 的增加有关。尽管需要进一步的研究,包括其他对照组,以确定 CBT 对 GM 和大脑功能的具体作用,但我们提出,前额叶和后顶叶皮质 GM 的增加反映了对疼痛的自上而下的控制增强和对疼痛的认知再评价,体感皮质的变化反映了对有害信号的感知改变。
应对慢性疼痛的 11 周 CBT 干预导致前额叶和体感脑区 GM 体积增加,以及与疼痛灾难化减少相关的背外侧前额叶体积增加。这些结果增加了越来越多的证据表明,CBT 可能是慢性疼痛的一种有价值的治疗选择。