Kaur Jaspreet, Bingel Ulrike, Kincses Balint, Forkmann Katarina, Schmidt Katharina
Department of Neurology and Center for Translational Neuro- and Behavioral Sciences, University Hospital Essen, Essen, Germany.
Pain Rep. 2024 Aug 7;9(5):e1178. doi: 10.1097/PR9.0000000000001178. eCollection 2024 Oct.
Pain can automatically interfere with ongoing cognitive processes such as attention and memory. The extent of pain's negative effects on cognitive functioning seems to depend on a balance between top-down and bottom-up factors.
In this large, preregistered, pooled reanalysis of 8 studies, we investigated the robustness of the detrimental effect of acute pain on recognition memory and whether top-down mechanisms such as pain-related expectations or cognitions (pain-related fear, pain catastrophizing) modulate this effect.
Two hundred forty-seven healthy participants underwent similar experimental paradigms, including a visual categorization task with images randomly paired with (or without) concomitant painful stimulation and a subsequent unannounced recognition task. Recognition memory (ie, d', recollection, and familiarity) and categorization performance (ie, reaction time, accuracy) served as proxies for the effect of pain on cognitive performance.
Acute painful stimulation significantly impaired recognition performance (d', familiarity). However, recognition performance was not significantly modulated by participants' expectations regarding the effect of pain on task performance or pain-related cognitions in this sample of healthy participants.
Our results corroborate the negative effects of pain on (visual) memory encoding reported in previous studies and reports of "memory problems" from patients with chronic pain. To characterize the role of bottom-up and top-down factors for the detrimental effects of pain, large-scale studies with more nuanced study designs are necessary. Future studies in patient cohorts must unravel the interaction of maladaptive pain-related cognitions and the often-reported impaired cognitive performance in chronic pain patients.
疼痛会自动干扰正在进行的认知过程,如注意力和记忆。疼痛对认知功能的负面影响程度似乎取决于自上而下和自下而上因素之间的平衡。
在这项对8项研究进行的大规模、预先注册的汇总再分析中,我们研究了急性疼痛对识别记忆的有害影响的稳健性,以及诸如与疼痛相关的期望或认知(与疼痛相关的恐惧、疼痛灾难化)等自上而下的机制是否会调节这种影响。
247名健康参与者接受了类似的实验范式,包括一项视觉分类任务,其中图像随机与(或不与)伴随的疼痛刺激配对,以及随后的一项未宣布的识别任务。识别记忆(即d'、回忆和熟悉度)和分类表现(即反应时间、准确性)作为疼痛对认知表现影响的指标。
急性疼痛刺激显著损害了识别表现(d'、熟悉度)。然而,在这个健康参与者样本中,参与者对疼痛对任务表现的影响的期望或与疼痛相关的认知并没有显著调节识别表现。
我们的结果证实了先前研究中报道的疼痛对(视觉)记忆编码的负面影响,以及慢性疼痛患者“记忆问题”的报告。为了描述自上而下和自下而上因素在疼痛有害影响中的作用,需要进行更细致研究设计的大规模研究。未来对患者队列的研究必须阐明适应不良的与疼痛相关的认知与慢性疼痛患者中经常报道的认知表现受损之间的相互作用。