From the Neuroimaging Laboratory (Ottaviani, Fagioli, Macaluso, Bozzali), IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation; Department of Psychology (Ottaviani), Sapienza University of Rome; Department of Cardiovascular, Dysmetabolic and Aging-associated Diseases (Mattei, Censi, Calcagnini), Italian Institute of Health, Rome, Italy; Institute of Metabolism and Systems Research (Edwards), College of Medical and Dental Sciences, Birmingham University, UK; ImpAct Team (Macaluso), Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, France; and Psychiatry, BSMS Department of Neuroscience (Critchley), Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
Psychosom Med. 2018 Nov/Dec;80(9):845-852. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000581.
High blood pressure (BP) is associated with reduced pain sensitivity, known as BP-related hypoalgesia. The underlying neural mechanisms remain uncertain, yet arterial baroreceptor signaling, occurring at cardiac systole, is implicated. We examined normotensives using functional neuroimaging and pain stimulation during distinct phases of the cardiac cycle to test the hypothesized neural mediation of baroreceptor-induced attenuation of pain.
Eighteen participants (10 women; 32.7 (6.5) years) underwent BP monitoring for 1 week at home, and individual pain thresholds were determined in the laboratory. Subsequently, participants were administered unpredictable painful and nonpainful electrocutaneous shocks (stimulus type), timed to occur either at systole or at diastole (cardiac phase) in an event-related design. After each trial, participants evaluated their subjective experience.
Subjective pain was lower for painful stimuli administered at systole compared with diastole, F(1, 2283) = 4.82, p = 0.03. Individuals with higher baseline BP demonstrated overall lower pain perception, F(1, 2164) = 10.47, p < .0001. Within the brain, painful stimulation activated somatosensory areas, prefrontal cortex, cingulate cortex, posterior insula, amygdala, and the thalamus. Stimuli delivered during systole (concurrent with baroreceptor discharge) activated areas associated with heightened parasympathetic drive. No stimulus type by cardiac phase interaction emerged except for a small cluster located in the right parietal cortex.
We confirm the negative associations between BP and pain, highlighting the antinociceptive impact of baroreceptor discharge. Neural substrates associated with baroreceptor/BP-related hypoalgesia include superior parietal lobule, precentral, and lingual gyrus, regions typically involved in the cognitive aspects of pain experience.
高血压(BP)与疼痛敏感性降低有关,称为 BP 相关的痛觉减退。其潜在的神经机制尚不清楚,但涉及到发生在心脏收缩期的动脉压力感受器信号。我们使用功能神经影像学和疼痛刺激在心脏周期的不同阶段检查了正常血压者,以测试压力感受器引起的疼痛减轻的神经介导作用。
18 名参与者(10 名女性;32.7(6.5)岁)在家中进行了一周的血压监测,并在实验室中确定了个体的疼痛阈值。随后,参与者接受了不可预测的疼痛和非疼痛性的电皮肤刺激(刺激类型),在事件相关设计中定时发生在收缩期或舒张期(心脏阶段)。每次试验后,参与者评估他们的主观体验。
与舒张期相比,收缩期给予的疼痛刺激的主观疼痛较低,F(1,2283)= 4.82,p = 0.03。基线 BP 较高的个体总体上表现出较低的疼痛感知,F(1,2164)= 10.47,p <.0001。在大脑中,疼痛刺激激活了躯体感觉区域、前额叶皮层、扣带皮层、后岛叶、杏仁核和丘脑。在收缩期(与压力感受器放电同时)给予的刺激激活了与副交感神经驱动增强相关的区域。除了位于右顶叶皮层的一小簇外,没有出现刺激类型与心脏阶段相互作用的情况。
我们证实了 BP 与疼痛之间的负相关关系,强调了压力感受器放电的镇痛作用。与压力感受器/BP 相关的痛觉减退相关的神经基质包括顶叶上回、中央前回和舌回,这些区域通常与疼痛体验的认知方面有关。