Postorino Martina, May Elisabeth S, Nickel Moritz M, Tiemann Laura, Ploner Markus
Department of Neurology and TUM-Neuroimaging Center, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany.
Department of Neurology and TUM-Neuroimaging Center, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Oct 1;118(4):2267-2274. doi: 10.1152/jn.00489.2017. Epub 2017 Aug 2.
The protective function of pain depends on appropriate motor responses to avoid injury and promote recovery. The preparation and execution of motor responses is thus an essential part of pain. However, it is not yet fully understood how pain and motor processes interact in the brain. Here we used electroencephalography to investigate the effects of pain on motor preparation in the human brain. Twenty healthy human participants performed a motor task in which they performed button presses to stop increasingly painful thermal stimuli when they became intolerable. In another condition, participants performed button presses without concurrent stimulation. The results show that the amplitudes of preparatory event-related desynchronizations at alpha and beta frequencies did not differ between conditions. In contrast, the amplitude of the preparatory readiness potential was reduced when a button press was performed to stop a painful stimulus compared with a button press without concomitant pain. A control experiment with nonpainful thermal stimuli showed a similar reduction of the readiness potential when a button press was performed to stop a nonpainful thermal stimulus. Together, these findings indicate that painful and nonpainful thermal stimuli can similarly influence motor preparation in the human brain. Pain-specific effects on motor preparation in the human brain remain to be demonstrated. Pain is inherently linked to motor processes, but the interactions between pain and motor processes in the human brain are not yet fully understood. Using electroencephalography, we show that pain reduces movement-preparatory brain activity. Further results indicate that this effect is not pain specific but independent of the modality of stimulation.
疼痛的保护功能取决于对避免受伤和促进恢复的适当运动反应。因此,运动反应的准备和执行是疼痛的一个重要组成部分。然而,疼痛与运动过程在大脑中如何相互作用尚未完全清楚。在这里,我们使用脑电图来研究疼痛对人类大脑中运动准备的影响。20名健康的人类参与者执行了一项运动任务,在该任务中,当热刺激变得难以忍受时,他们通过按下按钮来停止越来越疼痛的热刺激。在另一种情况下,参与者在没有同时进行刺激的情况下按下按钮。结果表明,在两种情况下,α和β频率下的准备事件相关去同步化的幅度没有差异。相比之下,与没有伴随疼痛的按钮按下相比,当按下按钮以停止疼痛刺激时,准备就绪电位的幅度降低。一项使用非疼痛热刺激的对照实验表明,当按下按钮以停止非疼痛热刺激时,就绪电位也有类似的降低。总之,这些发现表明,疼痛和非疼痛热刺激可以类似地影响人类大脑中的运动准备。疼痛对人类大脑中运动准备的特定影响仍有待证明。疼痛与运动过程有着内在联系,但疼痛与人类大脑中运动过程之间的相互作用尚未完全了解。通过脑电图,我们表明疼痛会降低运动准备的大脑活动。进一步的结果表明,这种影响不是疼痛特有的,而是与刺激方式无关。