Quidé Yann, Norman-Nott Nell, Hesam-Shariati Negin, McAuley James H, Gustin Sylvia M
NeuroRecovery Research Hub, School of Psychology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; and Centre for Pain IMPACT, Neuroscience Research Australia, Randwick, New South Wales, Australia.
Centre for Pain IMPACT, Neuroscience Research Australia, Randwick, New South Wales, Australia; and School of Health Sciences, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
BJPsych Open. 2023 May 10;9(3):e80. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2023.61.
Depressive symptoms are often comorbid with chronic pain. These conditions share aberrant emotion processing and regulation, as well as having common brain networks. However, the relationship between depressive symptoms and chronic pain and the effects on emotional brain function are unclear.
The present study aimed to disentangle the effects of chronic pain and depressive symptoms on functional connectivity between regions implicated in both these conditions.
Twenty-six individuals with chronic pain (referred to as the pain group) and 32 healthy controls underwent resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging and completed the Beck Depression Inventory. Main effects of group, depressive symptoms (total severity score) and their interaction on the functional connectivity of three seed regions (the left and right amygdalae and the medial prefrontal cortex; mPFC) with the rest of the brain were evaluated. In cases of significant interaction, moderation analyses were conducted.
The group × depressive symptoms interaction was significantly associated with changes in connectivity between the right amygdala and the mPFC (family-wise error-corrected -threshold (pFWEc = 0.008). In the moderation analysis, the pain group showed weaker connectivity between these regions at lower levels of depressive symptoms ( = 0.020), and stronger connectivity at higher levels of depressive symptoms ( = 0.003), compared with the healthy controls. In addition, the strength of connectivity decreased in the healthy controls ( = 0.005) and increased in the pain group ( = 0.014) as the severity of depressive symptoms increased.
Depressive symptoms moderate the impact of chronic pain on emotional brain function, with potential implications for the choice of treatment for chronic pain.
抑郁症状常与慢性疼痛并存。这些病症存在异常的情绪处理与调节问题,且拥有共同的脑网络。然而,抑郁症状与慢性疼痛之间的关系以及对情绪脑功能的影响尚不清楚。
本研究旨在厘清慢性疼痛和抑郁症状对涉及这两种情况的脑区之间功能连接的影响。
26名慢性疼痛患者(称为疼痛组)和32名健康对照者接受静息态功能磁共振成像检查,并完成贝克抑郁量表。评估了组别、抑郁症状(总严重程度评分)及其交互作用对三个种子区域(左右杏仁核和内侧前额叶皮质;mPFC)与大脑其他区域功能连接的主要影响。在存在显著交互作用的情况下,进行了调节分析。
组别×抑郁症状的交互作用与右侧杏仁核和mPFC之间连接性的变化显著相关(家族性错误校正阈值(pFWEc = 0.008)。在调节分析中,与健康对照者相比,疼痛组在抑郁症状水平较低时这些区域之间的连接性较弱(p = 0.020),而在抑郁症状水平较高时连接性较强(p = 0.003)。此外,随着抑郁症状严重程度的增加,健康对照者的连接强度降低(p = 0.005),而疼痛组的连接强度增加(p = 0.014)。
抑郁症状调节慢性疼痛对情绪脑功能的影响,这对慢性疼痛治疗方案的选择可能具有潜在意义。