Literature DB >> 10493903

A comparative fMRI study of cortical representations for thermal painful, vibrotactile, and motor performance tasks.

P A Gelnar1, B R Krauss, P R Sheehe, N M Szeverenyi, A V Apkarian.   

Abstract

Cortical activity due to a thermal painful stimulus applied to the right hand was studied in the middle third of the contralateral brain and compared to activations for vibrotactile and motor tasks using the same body part, in nine normal subjects. Cortical activity was demonstrated utilizing multislice echo-planar functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and a surface coil. The cortical activity was analyzed based upon individual subject activity maps and on group-averaged activity maps. The results show significant differences in activations across the three tasks and the cortical areas studied. The study indicates that fMRI enables examination of cortical networks subserving pain perception at an anatomical detail not available with other brain imaging techniques and shows that this cortical network underlying pain perception shares components with the networks underlying touch perception and motor execution. However, the thermal pain perception network also has components that are unique to this perception. The uniquely activated areas were in the secondary somatosensory region, insula, and posterior cingulate cortex. The posterior cingulate cortex activity was in a region that, in the monkey, receives nociceptive inputs from posterior thalamic medial and lateral nuclei that in turn are targets for spinothalamic terminations. Discrete subdivisions of the primary somatosensory and motor cortical areas were also activated in the thermal pain task, showing region-dependent differences in the extent of overlap with the other two tasks. Within the primary motor cortex, a hand region was preferentially active in the task in which the stimulus was painful heat. In the primary somatosensory cortex most activity in the painful heat task was localized to area 1, where the motor and vibratory task activities were also coincident. The study also indicates that the functional connectivity across multiple cortical regions reorganizes dynamically with each task. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10493903     DOI: 10.1006/nimg.1999.0482

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  48 in total

1.  Exacerbation of pain by anxiety is associated with activity in a hippocampal network.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2002-04-15       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 3.  [Cortical representation of pain].

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Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-04-08       Impact factor: 2.714

7.  Functional brain areas associated with manipulation of a prehensile tool: a PET study.

Authors:  Hayato Tsuda; Tomoko Aoki; Naohiko Oku; Yasuyuki Kimura; Jun Hatazawa; Hiroshi Kinoshita
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 5.038

8.  EEG analysis reveals widespread directed functional interactions related to a painful cutaneous laser stimulus.

Authors:  T Markman; C C Liu; J H Chien; N E Crone; J Zhang; F A Lenz
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2013-08-14       Impact factor: 2.714

9.  Coordinate-based activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis of neuroimaging data: a random-effects approach based on empirical estimates of spatial uncertainty.

Authors:  Simon B Eickhoff; Angela R Laird; Christian Grefkes; Ling E Wang; Karl Zilles; Peter T Fox
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 5.038

10.  Spatially aggregated multiclass pattern classification in functional MRI using optimally selected functional brain areas.

Authors:  Weili Zheng; Elena S Ackley; Manel Martínez-Ramón; Stefan Posse
Journal:  Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2012-08-16       Impact factor: 2.546

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