Predicting Value of Pain and Analgesia: Nucleus Accumbens Response to Noxious Stimuli Changes in the Presence of Chronic Pain
Adult
Cerebral Cortex
Male
Pain Threshold
Brain Mapping
Neuroscience(all)
HUMDISEASE
Pain
Middle Aged
Adaptation, Physiological
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Nucleus Accumbens
Reference Values
Case-Control Studies
Chronic Disease
Psychophysics
Humans
Analgesia
SYSNEURO
Evoked Potentials
Low Back Pain
DOI:
10.1016/j.neuron.2010.03.002
Publication Date:
2010-04-15T09:12:13Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
We compared brain activations in response to acute noxious thermal stimuli in controls and chronic back pain (CBP) patients. Pain perception and related cortical activation patterns were similar in the two groups. However, nucleus accumbens (NAc) activity differentiated the groups at a very high accuracy, exhibiting phasic and tonic responses with distinct properties. Positive phasic NAc activations at stimulus onset and offset tracked stimulus salience and, in normal subjects, predicted reward (pain relief) magnitude at stimulus offset. In CBP, NAc activity correlated with different cortical circuitry from that of normals and phasic activity at stimulus offset was negative in polarity, suggesting that the acute pain relieves the ongoing back pain. The relieving effect was confirmed in a separate psychophysical study in CBP. Therefore, in contrast to somatosensory pathways, which reflect sensory properties of acute noxious stimuli, NAc activity in humans encodes its predicted value and anticipates its analgesic potential on chronic pain.
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