Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; Department of Neuroradiology, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; Department of Neuroradiology, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Brain Behav Immun. 2019 Oct;81:272-279. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2019.06.024. Epub 2019 Jun 19.
To our knowledge, this is the first study assessing brain activation in response to painful stimulation over disease-relevant (finger joint) vs. neutral area (thumb nail) in patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (RA) compared to healthy controls (HC).
Thirty-one RA patients and 23 HC underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while stimulated with subjectively calibrated painful pressures corresponding to a pain sensation of 50 mm on a 100 mm VAS scale (P50) at disease-affected finger joint and thumbnail (left hand), and corresponding sites in HC.
Compared to controls, RA patients had significantly increased pain sensitivity (lower P50) at the inflamed joints but not at the thumbnail. RA patients exhibited significantly less activation in regions related to pain- and somatosensory processing (S1, M1, anterior insula, S2, SMG and MCC) during painful joint stimulation, compared to HC. No group difference in cerebral pain processing was found for the non-affected thumbnail. Within RA patients, significantly less brain activation was found in response to painful stimulation over disease-affected joint compared to non-affected thumbnail in bilateral S1, bilateral S2, and anterior insula. Further, RA patients exhibited a right-sided dlPFC deactivation, psycho-physiologically interacting (PPI) with the left dlPFC in response to painful stimulation at disease-affected joints.
The results indicate normal pain sensitivity and cerebral pain processing in RA for non-affected sites, while the increased sensitivity at inflamed joints indicate peripheral/spinal sensitization. Brain imaging data suggest that disease-relevant pain processing in RA is marked by aberrations and a failed initiation of cortical top-down regulation.
据我们所知,这是第一项研究,评估了与健康对照组(HC)相比,类风湿关节炎(RA)患者在受到与疾病相关的(手指关节)和中性区域(拇指指甲)的疼痛刺激时大脑的激活情况。
31 名 RA 患者和 23 名 HC 接受了功能磁共振成像(fMRI)检查,同时用主观校准的疼痛压力刺激左手的受疾病影响的手指关节和拇指指甲(左手)和 HC 中相应的部位,疼痛压力对应的疼痛感觉为 100mmVAS 量表上的 50mm(P50)。
与对照组相比,RA 患者在受炎症影响的关节处的疼痛敏感性(较低的 P50)显著增加,但在拇指指甲处没有增加。与 HC 相比,RA 患者在疼痛和躯体感觉处理相关区域(S1、M1、前岛叶、S2、SMG 和 MCC)的激活明显减少。在未受影响的拇指指甲处,两组在大脑疼痛处理方面没有差异。在 RA 患者中,与非受累的拇指指甲相比,在双侧 S1、双侧 S2 和前岛叶,在受到受累关节的疼痛刺激时,大脑的激活明显减少。此外,RA 患者在受到受累关节的疼痛刺激时,右侧 dlPFC 出现去激活,与左侧 dlPFC 发生心理生理相互作用(PPI)。
这些结果表明,非受累部位的 RA 具有正常的疼痛敏感性和大脑疼痛处理能力,而炎症关节的敏感性增加则表明周围/脊髓敏化。脑成像数据表明,RA 中与疾病相关的疼痛处理以异常和皮质自上而下调节的失败启动为特征。