Literature DB >> 25929747

Nonlinear Effects of Noxious Thermal Stimulation and Working Memory Demands on Subjective Pain Perception.

John A Sturgeon1, Meghan M Tieu1, Laura E Jastrzab2, Rebecca McCue1, Vanisha Gandhi3, Sean C Mackey1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A bidirectional relationship between working memory (WM) and acute pain has long been assumed, but equivocal evidence exists regarding this relationship. This study characterized the relationship between WM and acute pain processing in healthy individuals using an adapted Sternberg WM task.
DESIGN: Participants completed a Sternberg task while receiving noxious thermal stimulation. Participants received a pseudorandom presentation of four different temperatures (baseline temperatures and individually determined low-, medium-, and high-temperature stimuli) and four levels of Sternberg task difficulty (0-, 3-, 6-, and 9-letter strings).
SUBJECTS: Twenty-eight healthy participants were recruited from Stanford University and the surrounding community to complete this study.
RESULTS: A nonlinear interaction between intensity of thermal stimulation and difficulty of the Sternberg task was noted. Increased cognitive load from the Sternberg task resulted in increased perception of pain in low-intensity thermal stimulation but suppressed pain perception in high-intensity thermal stimulation. Thermal stimulation had no significant effect on participants' response time or accuracy on the Sternberg task regardless of intensity level.
CONCLUSIONS: Pain perception appears to decrease as a function of WM load only for sufficiently noxious stimuli. However, increasing noxious stimuli did not affect cognitive performance. These complex relationships may reflect a shared cognitive space that can become "overloaded" with input of multiple stimuli of sufficient intensity. Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Experimental Pain; Sternberg Task; Working Memory

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25929747      PMCID: PMC9444236          DOI: 10.1111/pme.12774

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pain Med        ISSN: 1526-2375            Impact factor:   3.637


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