Mathur Vani A, Khan Shariq A, Keaser Michael L, Hubbard Catherine S, Goyal Madhav, Seminowicz David A
Department of Neural and Pain Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore, School of Dentistry, 650 West Baltimore Street, 8 South, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA ; Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Suite 100, 5510 Nathan Shock Dr., Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Department of Neural and Pain Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore, School of Dentistry, 650 West Baltimore Street, 8 South, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
Neuroimage Clin. 2015 Jan 10;7:347-58. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2015.01.003. eCollection 2015.
Little is known about the effect of migraine on neural cognitive networks. However, cognitive dysfunction is increasingly being recognized as a comorbidity of chronic pain. Pain appears to affect cognitive ability and the function of cognitive networks over time, and decrements in cognitive function can exacerbate affective and sensory components of pain. We investigated differences in cognitive processing and pain-cognition interactions between 14 migraine patients and 14 matched healthy controls using an fMRI block-design with two levels of task difficulty and concurrent heat (painful and not painful) stimuli. Across groups, cognitive networks were recruited in response to a difficult cognitive task, and a pain-task interaction was found in the right (contralateral to pain stimulus) posterior insula (pINS), such that activity was modulated by decreasing the thermal pain stimulus or by engaging the difficult cognitive task. Migraine patients had less task-related deactivation within the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and left dorsal anterior midcingulate cortex (aMCC) compared to controls. These regions have been reported to have decreased cortical thickness and cognitive-related deactivation within other pain populations, and are also associated with pain regulation, suggesting that the current findings may reflect altered cognitive function and top-down regulation of pain. During pain conditions, patients had decreased task-related activity, but more widespread task-related reductions in pain-related activity, compared to controls, suggesting cognitive resources may be diverted from task-related to pain-reduction-related processes in migraine. Overall, these findings suggest that migraine is associated with altered cognitive-related neural activity, which may reflect altered pain regulatory processes as well as broader functional restructuring.
关于偏头痛对神经认知网络的影响,人们了解甚少。然而,认知功能障碍日益被视为慢性疼痛的一种共病。随着时间的推移,疼痛似乎会影响认知能力和认知网络的功能,而认知功能的下降会加剧疼痛的情感和感觉成分。我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)组块设计,设置了两个难度水平的任务以及同时施加热(疼痛和非疼痛)刺激,研究了14名偏头痛患者和14名匹配的健康对照者在认知加工和疼痛 - 认知相互作用方面的差异。在所有组中,面对困难的认知任务时都会募集认知网络,并且在右侧(与疼痛刺激对侧)后岛叶(pINS)发现了疼痛 - 任务相互作用,即通过降低热痛刺激或参与困难的认知任务来调节活动。与对照组相比,偏头痛患者在左侧背外侧前额叶皮质(DLPFC)和左侧背侧前扣带回皮质(aMCC)内与任务相关的失活较少。据报道,在其他疼痛人群中,这些区域的皮质厚度减小且与认知相关的失活,并且它们也与疼痛调节有关,这表明当前的研究结果可能反映了认知功能的改变以及对疼痛的自上而下的调节。在疼痛状态下,与对照组相比,患者与任务相关的活动减少,但与疼痛相关活动的任务相关减少更为广泛,这表明在偏头痛中认知资源可能从与任务相关的过程转移到了与减轻疼痛相关的过程。总体而言,这些研究结果表明偏头痛与认知相关神经活动的改变有关,这可能反映了疼痛调节过程的改变以及更广泛的功能重组。