Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, United States.
Symbiotic Project on Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.
Pain. 2018 Aug;159(8):1494-1507. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001232.
Chronic pain may alter both affect- and value-related behaviors, which represents a potentially treatable aspect of chronic pain experience. Current understanding of how chronic pain influences the function of brain reward systems, however, is limited. Using a monetary incentive delay task and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we measured neural correlates of reward anticipation and outcomes in female participants with the chronic pain condition of fibromyalgia (N = 17) and age-matched, pain-free, female controls (N = 15). We hypothesized that patients would demonstrate lower positive arousal, as well as altered reward anticipation and outcome activity within corticostriatal circuits implicated in reward processing. Patients demonstrated lower arousal ratings as compared with controls, but no group differences were observed for valence, positive arousal, or negative arousal ratings. Group fMRI analyses were conducted to determine predetermined region of interest, nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), responses to potential gains, potential losses, reward outcomes, and punishment outcomes. Compared with controls, patients demonstrated similar, although slightly reduced, NAcc activity during gain anticipation. Conversely, patients demonstrated dramatically reduced mPFC activity during gain anticipation-possibly related to lower estimated reward probabilities. Further, patients demonstrated normal mPFC activity to reward outcomes, but dramatically heightened mPFC activity to no-loss (nonpunishment) outcomes. In parallel to NAcc and mPFC responses, patients demonstrated slightly reduced activity during reward anticipation in other brain regions, which included the ventral tegmental area, anterior cingulate cortex, and anterior insular cortex. Together, these results implicate altered corticostriatal processing of monetary rewards in chronic pain.
慢性疼痛可能会改变与情感和价值相关的行为,这代表了慢性疼痛体验中一个潜在可治疗的方面。然而,目前对于慢性疼痛如何影响大脑奖励系统的功能了解有限。本研究使用货币奖励延迟任务和功能磁共振成像(fMRI),测量了纤维肌痛(fibromyalgia,FM)慢性疼痛女性患者(N=17)和年龄匹配、无痛的健康女性对照(N=15)的奖赏预期和结果的神经相关性。我们假设患者会表现出较低的正唤醒,以及与奖励处理相关的皮质纹状体回路中奖赏预期和结果活动的改变。与对照组相比,患者表现出较低的唤醒评分,但在效价、正唤醒或负唤醒评分方面没有观察到组间差异。进行了组 fMRI 分析,以确定预先设定的兴趣区域,伏隔核(NAcc)和内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC),对潜在收益、潜在损失、奖励结果和惩罚结果的反应。与对照组相比,患者在获得预期时表现出相似的、尽管略有减少的 NAcc 活动。相反,患者在获得预期时表现出明显减少的 mPFC 活动,这可能与较低的估计奖励概率有关。此外,患者对奖励结果表现出正常的 mPFC 活动,但对无损失(非惩罚)结果表现出明显增加的 mPFC 活动。与 NAcc 和 mPFC 反应一致,患者在其他脑区(包括腹侧被盖区、前扣带回皮质和前岛叶)的奖赏预期期间表现出稍低的活动。总之,这些结果表明,慢性疼痛患者的金钱奖赏的皮质纹状体处理发生了改变。