Department of Neural and Pain Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of Maryland Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Center to Advance Chronic Pain Research, University of Maryland Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Pain. 2019 May;160(5):1196-1207. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001498.
The nucleus accumbens (NAc) has been implicated in sleep, reward, and pain modulation, but the relationship between these functional roles is unclear. This study aimed to determine whether NAc function at the onset and offset of a noxious thermal stimulus is enhanced by rewarding music, and whether that effect is reversed by experimental sleep disruption. Twenty-one healthy subjects underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging scans on 2 separate days after both uninterrupted sleep and experimental sleep disruption. During functional magnetic resonance imaging scans, participants experienced noxious stimulation while listening to individualized rewarding or neutral music. Behavioral results revealed that rewarding music significantly reduced pain intensity compared with neutral music, and disrupted sleep was associated with decreased pain intensity in the context of listening to music. In whole-brain family-wise error cluster-corrected analysis, the NAc was activated at pain onset, but not during tonic pain or at pain offset. Sleep disruption attenuated NAc activation at pain onset and during tonic pain. Rewarding music altered NAc connectivity with key nodes of the corticostriatal circuits during pain onset. Sleep disruption increased reward-related connectivity between the NAc and the anterior midcingulate cortex at pain onset. This study thus indicates that experimental sleep disruption modulates NAc function during the onset of pain in a manner that may be conditional on the presence of competing reward-related stimuli. These findings point to potential mechanisms for the interaction between sleep, reward, and pain, and suggest that sleep disruption affects both the detection and processing of aversive stimuli that may have important implications for chronic pain.
伏隔核(NAc)被认为与睡眠、奖励和疼痛调节有关,但这些功能角色之间的关系尚不清楚。本研究旨在确定在有害热刺激的起始和结束时,奖励性音乐是否增强了 NAc 的功能,以及睡眠干扰是否会逆转这种效应。21 名健康受试者在经过无干扰睡眠和实验性睡眠干扰后,分别在 2 天接受功能磁共振成像扫描。在功能磁共振成像扫描期间,参与者在聆听个性化奖励或中性音乐的同时经历有害刺激。行为学结果表明,与中性音乐相比,奖励性音乐显著降低了疼痛强度,而睡眠干扰与听音乐时疼痛强度的降低有关。在全脑家族性错误聚类校正分析中,NAc 在疼痛起始时被激活,但不在持续疼痛或疼痛结束时被激活。睡眠干扰减弱了疼痛起始和持续疼痛时的 NAc 激活。奖励性音乐改变了疼痛起始时 NAc 与皮质纹状体回路关键节点之间的连接。睡眠干扰增加了疼痛起始时 NAc 与前扣带皮质之间与奖励相关的连接。因此,这项研究表明,实验性睡眠干扰以可能依赖于竞争奖励相关刺激存在的方式调节疼痛起始时 NAc 的功能。这些发现为睡眠、奖励和疼痛之间的相互作用提供了潜在的机制,并表明睡眠干扰会影响对厌恶刺激的检测和处理,这可能对慢性疼痛有重要影响。