| Literature DB >> 25904140 |
A J Racek1, X Hu2, T D Nascimento3, M C Bender4, L Khatib5, D Chiego1, G R Holland1, P Bauer1, N McDonald1, R P Ellwood6, A F DaSilva7.
Abstract
A dental appointment commonly prompts fear of a painful experience, yet we have never fully understood how our brains react to the expectation of imminent tooth pain once in a dental chair. In our study, 21 patients with hypersensitive teeth were tested using nonpainful and painful stimuli in a clinical setting. Subjects were tested in a dental chair using functional near-infrared spectroscopy to measure cortical activity during a stepwise cold stimulation of a hypersensitive tooth, as well as nonpainful control stimulation on the same tooth. Patients' sensory-discriminative and emotional-cognitive cortical regions were studied through the transition of a neutral to a painful stimulation. In the putative somatosensory cortex contralateral to the stimulus, 2 well-defined hemodynamic peaks were detected in the homuncular orofacial region: the first peak during the nonpainful phase and a second peak after the pain threshold was reached. Moreover, in the upper-left and lower-right prefrontal cortices, there was a significant active hemodynamic response in only the first phase, before the pain. Subsequently, the same prefrontal cortical areas deactivated after a painful experience had been reached. Our study indicates for the first time that pain perception and expectation elicit different hemodynamic cortical responses in a dental clinical setting. © International & American Associations for Dental Research 2015.Entities:
Keywords: clinical setting; dental pain; functional near-infrared spectroscopy; percussion; prefrontal cortex; somatosensory cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25904140 PMCID: PMC9096194 DOI: 10.1177/0022034515581642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dent Res ISSN: 0022-0345 Impact factor: 8.924