Department of Physics and Computational Radiology, Division of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo 0372, Norway.
Department of Psychology, Pedagogy and Law, School of Health Sciences, Kristiania University College, Oslo 0107, Norway.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Jun 27;120(26):e2212910120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2212910120. Epub 2023 Jun 20.
Social interactions such as the patient-clinician encounter can influence pain, but the underlying dynamic interbrain processes are unclear. Here, we investigated the dynamic brain processes supporting social modulation of pain by assessing simultaneous brain activity (fMRI hyperscanning) from chronic pain patients and clinicians during video-based live interaction. Patients received painful and nonpainful pressure stimuli either with a supportive clinician present (Dyadic) or in isolation (Solo). In half of the dyads, clinicians performed a clinical consultation and intake with the patient prior to hyperscanning (Clinical Interaction), which increased self-reported therapeutic alliance. For the other half, patient-clinician hyperscanning was completed without prior clinical interaction (No Interaction). Patients reported lower pain intensity in the Dyadic, relative to the Solo, condition. In Clinical Interaction dyads relative to No Interaction, patients evaluated their clinicians as better able to understand their pain, and clinicians were more accurate when estimating patients' pain levels. In Clinical Interaction dyads, compared to No Interaction, patients showed stronger activation of the dorsolateral and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC and vlPFC) and primary (S1) and secondary (S2) somatosensory areas (Dyadic-Solo contrast), and clinicians showed increased dynamic dlPFC concordance with patients' S2 activity during pain. Furthermore, the strength of S2-dlPFC concordance was positively correlated with self-reported therapeutic alliance. These findings support that empathy and supportive care can reduce pain intensity and shed light on the brain processes underpinning social modulation of pain in patient-clinician interactions. Our findings further suggest that clinicians' dlPFC concordance with patients' somatosensory processing during pain can be boosted by increasing therapeutic alliance.
社交互动,如医患交流,可以影响疼痛,但潜在的大脑间动态过程尚不清楚。在这里,我们通过评估慢性疼痛患者和临床医生在基于视频的实时互动期间的同时大脑活动(功能磁共振成像超扫描),研究了支持社交调节疼痛的动态大脑过程。患者在有支持性临床医生存在(双人)或孤立(单人)的情况下接受疼痛和非疼痛的压力刺激。在一半的双人组中,临床医生在超扫描之前与患者进行临床咨询和评估(临床互动),这增加了自我报告的治疗联盟。对于另一半,患者 - 临床医生超扫描在没有先前临床互动的情况下完成(无互动)。与单人条件相比,患者在双人条件下报告的疼痛强度较低。与无互动相比,在临床互动双人组中,患者认为他们的临床医生更能够理解他们的疼痛,并且临床医生在估计患者的疼痛水平时更准确。在临床互动双人组中,与无互动相比,患者的背外侧和腹外侧前额叶皮层(dlPFC 和 vlPFC)以及初级(S1)和次级(S2)体感区域(双人-单人对比)的激活更强,并且临床医生在疼痛期间表现出与患者 S2 活动的动态 dlPFC 一致性增加。此外,S2-dlPFC 一致性的强度与自我报告的治疗联盟呈正相关。这些发现支持同理心和支持性护理可以减轻疼痛强度,并阐明在医患互动中社交调节疼痛的大脑过程。我们的研究结果进一步表明,可以通过增加治疗联盟来增强临床医生在疼痛期间与患者体感处理的 dlPFC 一致性。