From the Department of Psychology (Taylor, Gill), and Stomatology (Rainville), Université de Montréal; Department of Psychology (Roy), McGill University; Centre de recherche de l'Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal (CRIUGM) (Taylor, Roy, Gill, Mueller, Rainville); Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain (AECRP) (Roy), McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences (Chang), Dartmouth College, New Hampshire; and Centre de recherche en neuropsychologie et cognition (CERNEC) (Taylor, Gill, Rainville), and Groupe de recherche sur le système nerveux central (GRSNC) (Rainville), Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
Psychosom Med. 2018 Nov/Dec;80(9):799-806. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000634.
Mindfulness-based practice is a form of cognitive/affective training that may help reduce suffering by attenuating maladaptive anticipatory processes. This study's objective was to examine the pain modulating impact of classical fear learning in meditation practitioners.
The hyperalgesic effects of pain expectation and uncertainty were assessed outside formal meditation in 11 experienced meditators (>1000 hours) compared with meditation-naive controls during a Pavlovian classical fear-conditioning paradigm involving two visual stimuli (CS+/CS-), one of which (CS+) co-terminated with a noxious electrical stimulus (unconditioned stimulus) on 50% of trials. A Rescorla-Wagner/Pearce-Hall hybrid model was fitted onto the conditioned skin conductance responses using computational modeling to estimate two learning parameters: expected shock probability and associability (i.e., uncertainty).
Using a scale ranging between 0 (no pain) and 100 (extremely painful), meditators reported less pain (M = 19.9, SE = 5.1 for meditators, M = 32.4, SE = 2.4 for controls) but had comparable spinal motor responses (nociceptive flexion reflex) to the unconditioned stimulus. Multilevel mediation analyses revealed that meditators also exhibited reduced hyperalgesic effects of fear learning on higher-order pain responses but comparable effects on the nociceptive flexion reflex. These results suggest that mindfulness affects higher-order perceptual processes to a greater extent than from descending inhibitory controls. Furthermore, meditators showed reduced hyperalgesic effects of fear conditioning with no significant group difference in conditioned learning as evidenced by discriminative anticipatory skin conductance responses and learning parameters derived from computational modeling.
These results highlight potential mechanisms underlying mindfulness-related hypoalgesia, relevant to clinical conditions in which repeated pain exposure might reinforce hyperalgesic processes through fear conditioning.
基于正念的实践是一种认知/情感训练形式,它可以通过减轻适应不良的预期过程来帮助减轻痛苦。本研究的目的是检验冥想者在经典恐惧学习中对疼痛的调节作用。
在一项涉及两个视觉刺激(CS+/CS-)的巴甫洛夫式经典恐惧条件反射范式中,在正式冥想之外,评估 11 名经验丰富的冥想者(>1000 小时)与冥想新手对照组之间疼痛预期和不确定性的痛觉过敏效应,其中一个刺激(CS+)在 50%的试验中与疼痛性电刺激(非条件刺激)同时出现。使用计算模型对条件性皮肤电反应进行拟合,使用 Rescorla-Wagner/Pearce-Hall 混合模型来估计两个学习参数:预期的冲击概率和可联想性(即不确定性)。
使用从 0(无痛)到 100(极度疼痛)的量表,冥想者报告的疼痛程度较低(冥想者的平均值为 19.9,SE 为 5.1,对照组的平均值为 32.4,SE 为 2.4),但对非条件刺激的脊髓运动反应相似。多层次中介分析表明,冥想者对更高阶的疼痛反应也表现出恐惧学习的痛觉过敏效应降低,但对伤害性屈反射的影响则相似。这些结果表明,正念对高阶感知过程的影响比下行抑制控制更大。此外,冥想者表现出恐惧条件反射的痛觉过敏效应降低,而从条件性学习中得出的判别性预期皮肤电反应和学习参数则没有显著的组间差异。
这些结果强调了正念相关镇痛的潜在机制,这与临床情况下的重复疼痛暴露可能通过恐惧条件反射增强痛觉过敏过程有关。