Baker Anne K, Ericksen Lauren C, Koppelmans Vincent, Mickey Brian J, Martucci Katherine T, Zubieta Jon-Kar, Love Tiffany M
Department of Psychiatry, Huntsman Mental Health Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
Front Neurosci. 2022 Jun 7;16:889849. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2022.889849. eCollection 2022.
Chronic pain and reward processing are understood to be reciprocally related to one another. Previous studies of reward processing in chronic pain patients have reported incongruent findings. While several factors likely contribute to these disparate findings, these previous studies did not stratify their analyses by sex-a factor previously shown to robustly impact reward-related responses. Thus, we examined sex as a factor of interest in level of striatal activation during anticipation of monetary incentives among patients with chronic non-specific back pain and healthy controls (HC). This study utilized functional magnetic resonance imaging during a monetary incentive delay task to evaluate reward and loss responsivity in the striatum among males and females with and without chronic pain ( = 90). Group, sex, and group-by-sex interactions were analyzed repeated measures analysis of variance. Among HC, males exhibited significantly greater blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal in the striatum during reward anticipation, particularly during large reward trials. By contrast, no significant sex differences were observed among patients. A significant group-by-sex interaction was also observed, revealing diminished BOLD responses among males with chronic pain relative to control males. These results provide novel evidence of sex-specific reductions in anticipatory responses to reward in patients with chronic pain. Altered striatal reward responsivity among males, but not females, suggests that the reward systems of males and females are uniquely disrupted by chronic pain, and highlights the value of including sex as a factor of interest in future studies of reward responsivity in the context of persistent pain.
慢性疼痛与奖赏加工被认为是相互关联的。以往对慢性疼痛患者奖赏加工的研究报告了不一致的结果。虽然有几个因素可能导致了这些不同的结果,但这些先前的研究没有按性别对分析进行分层——此前有研究表明性别是一个对奖赏相关反应有显著影响的因素。因此,我们将性别作为一个感兴趣的因素,研究慢性非特异性背痛患者和健康对照者(HC)在预期金钱奖励时纹状体激活水平的差异。本研究在金钱奖励延迟任务中利用功能磁共振成像来评估有无慢性疼痛的男性和女性纹状体中的奖赏和损失反应性(n = 90)。通过重复测量方差分析对组、性别以及组×性别的交互作用进行分析。在健康对照者中,男性在奖赏预期期间,尤其是在大额奖励试验中,纹状体中的血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号显著更强。相比之下,患者中未观察到显著的性别差异。还观察到显著的组×性别交互作用,显示慢性疼痛男性相对于对照男性的BOLD反应减弱。这些结果为慢性疼痛患者对奖赏的预期反应存在性别特异性降低提供了新证据。男性而非女性纹状体奖赏反应性的改变表明,慢性疼痛对男性和女性的奖赏系统有独特的破坏作用,并强调了在未来持续性疼痛背景下奖赏反应性研究中纳入性别作为一个感兴趣因素的价值。