Mazza Stéphanie, Frot Maud, Rey Amandine E
Laboratoire d'Étude des Mécanismes Cognitifs, Équipe d'Accueil 3082, Université Lyon 2, France; Central Integration of Pain, Lyon Center for Neuroscience, INSERM U1028, CNRS UMR5292, Claude Bernard University, Lyon, France.
Central Integration of Pain, Lyon Center for Neuroscience, INSERM U1028, CNRS UMR5292, Claude Bernard University, Lyon, France.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2018 Dec 20;87(Pt B):183-192. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2017.08.006. Epub 2017 Aug 8.
Chronic pain patients often complain of their "poor memory" and numerous studies objectively confirmed such difficulties in reporting working memory (WM) and long-term memory (LTM) dysfunctions. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the literature on memory impairment in chronic pain (CP) patients. Twenty-four observational studies evaluating WM or/and LTM in a chronic pain group and a control group were included in this review. Results showed that studies consistently reported a moderate decline, in both WM and LTM performances in CP patients. Even if CP patients complained about forgetfulness, objective measurements did not permit to conclude to a long-term storage impairment. CP patients exhibited more specifically encoding or retrieving difficulties compared to controls. Results showed that chronic pain selectively impacted the most attention-demanding memory processes, such as working memory and recollection in long-term memory. Results also demonstrated that CP patients exhibited a memory bias directed towards painful events compared to control subjects. Several authors have suggested that CP could be a maladaptive consequence of memory mechanisms. The long-lasting presence of pain continuously reinforces aversive emotional associations with incidental events. The inability to extinguish this painful memory trace could explain the chronic persistence of pain even when the original injury has disappeared. A major concern is the need to extricate pain-related cognitive effects from those resulting from all the co-morbidities associated with CP which both have a deleterious effect on cognitive function.
慢性疼痛患者常常抱怨自己“记性差”,众多研究也客观证实了他们在报告工作记忆(WM)和长期记忆(LTM)功能障碍方面存在困难。本文对有关慢性疼痛(CP)患者记忆障碍的文献进行了全面综述。本综述纳入了24项观察性研究,这些研究评估了慢性疼痛组和对照组的工作记忆或/和长期记忆。结果表明,研究一致报告CP患者的工作记忆和长期记忆表现均有中度下降。即使CP患者抱怨健忘,但客观测量结果并未得出存在长期存储障碍的结论。与对照组相比,CP患者更具体地表现出编码或提取困难。结果表明,慢性疼痛选择性地影响了最需要注意力的记忆过程,如工作记忆和长期记忆中的回忆。结果还表明,与对照组相比,CP患者对疼痛事件表现出记忆偏差。几位作者提出,慢性疼痛可能是记忆机制的一种适应不良后果。疼痛的长期存在不断强化了与偶然事件的厌恶情绪关联。无法消除这种疼痛记忆痕迹可以解释即使最初的损伤已经消失,疼痛仍会长期持续。一个主要问题是需要将与疼痛相关的认知影响与CP所有共病所产生的认知影响区分开来,因为两者都会对认知功能产生有害影响。