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When the brain expects pain: common neural responses to pain anticipation are related to clinical pain and distress in fibromyalgia and osteoarthritis
Author(s) -
Brown Christopher A.,
ElDeredy Wael,
Jones Anthony K. P.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/ejn.12420
Subject(s) - fibromyalgia , pain catastrophizing , anticipation (artificial intelligence) , insula , chronic pain , osteoarthritis , dorsolateral prefrontal cortex , psychology , physical therapy , medicine , anxiety , physical medicine and rehabilitation , prefrontal cortex , psychiatry , neuroscience , cognition , alternative medicine , pathology , artificial intelligence , computer science
Supraspinal processes in humans can have a top‐down enhancing effect on nociceptive processing in the brain and spinal cord. Studies have begun to suggest that such influences occur in conditions such as fibromyalgia ( FM ), but it is not clear whether this is unique to FM pain or common to other forms of chronic pain, such as that associated with osteoarthritis ( OA ). We assessed top‐down processes by measuring anticipation‐evoked potentials and their estimated sources, just prior (< 500 ms) to laser heat pain stimulation, in 16 patients with FM , 16 patients with OA and 15 healthy participants, by using whole‐brain statistical parametric mapping. Clinical pain and psychological coping factors (pain catastrophizing, anxiety, and depression) were well matched between the patient groups, such that these did not confound our comparisons between FM and OA patients. For the same level of heat pain, insula activity was significantly higher in FM patients than in the other two groups during anticipation, and correlated with the intensity and extent of reported clinical pain. However, the same anticipatory insula activity also correlated with OA pain, and with the number of tender points across the two patient groups, suggesting common central mechanisms of tenderness. Activation in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was reduced during anticipation in both patient groups, and was related to less effective psychological coping. Our findings suggest common neural correlates of pain and tenderness in FM and OA that are enhanced in FM but not unique to this condition.

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