Loggia Marco L, Berna Chantal, Kim Jieun, Cahalan Christine M, Martel Marc-Olivier, Gollub Randy L, Wasan Ajay D, Napadow Vitaly, Edwards Robert R
Massachusetts General Hospital/Massachusetts Institute of Technology/Harvard Medical School Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, Massachusetts; Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts.
Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Pain. 2015 Aug;16(8):692-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2015.04.003. Epub 2015 Apr 30.
Although high levels of negative affect and cognitions have been associated with greater pain sensitivity in chronic pain conditions, the neural mechanisms mediating the hyperalgesic effect of psychological factors in patients with pain disorders are largely unknown. In this cross-sectional study, we hypothesized that 1) catastrophizing modulates brain responses to pain anticipation and 2) anticipatory brain activity mediates the hyperalgesic effect of different levels of catastrophizing in fibromyalgia (FM) patients. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we scanned the brains of 31 FM patients exposed to visual cues anticipating the onset of moderately intense deep-tissue pain stimuli. Our results indicated the existence of a negative association between catastrophizing and pain-anticipatory brain activity, including in the right lateral prefrontal cortex. A bootstrapped mediation analysis revealed that pain-anticipatory activity in the lateral prefrontal cortex mediates the association between catastrophizing and pain sensitivity. These findings highlight the role of the lateral prefrontal cortex in the pathophysiology of FM-related hyperalgesia and suggest that deficits in the recruitment of pain-inhibitory brain circuitry during pain-anticipatory periods may play an important contributory role in the association between various degrees of widespread hyperalgesia in FM and levels of catastrophizing, a well-validated measure of negative cognitions and psychological distress.
This article highlights the presence of alterations in pain-anticipatory brain activity in FM. These findings provide the rationale for the development of psychological or neurofeedback-based techniques aimed at modifying patients' negative affect and cognitions toward pain.
尽管在慢性疼痛状况下,高水平的消极情绪和认知与更高的疼痛敏感性相关,但疼痛障碍患者中心理因素的痛觉过敏效应所介导的神经机制在很大程度上尚不清楚。在这项横断面研究中,我们假设:1)灾难化思维调节大脑对疼痛预期的反应;2)预期性大脑活动介导纤维肌痛(FM)患者不同程度灾难化思维的痛觉过敏效应。我们使用功能磁共振成像扫描了31名FM患者的大脑,这些患者暴露于视觉线索下,预期中度强烈的深部组织疼痛刺激的发作。我们的结果表明,灾难化思维与疼痛预期大脑活动之间存在负相关,包括右侧前额叶外侧皮质。一项自抽样中介分析显示,前额叶外侧皮质的疼痛预期活动介导了灾难化思维与疼痛敏感性之间的关联。这些发现突出了前额叶外侧皮质在FM相关痛觉过敏病理生理学中的作用,并表明在疼痛预期期间疼痛抑制性大脑回路募集不足可能在FM中各种程度的广泛痛觉过敏与灾难化思维水平之间的关联中起重要作用,灾难化思维是一种经过充分验证的消极认知和心理困扰测量指标。
本文强调了FM患者疼痛预期大脑活动存在改变。这些发现为开发旨在改变患者对疼痛的消极情绪和认知的心理或基于神经反馈的技术提供了理论依据。