Literature DB >> 28426553

Greater fear of visceral pain contributes to differences between visceral and somatic pain in healthy women.

Laura Ricarda Koenen1, Adriane Icenhour1, Katarina Forkmann2, Annika Pasler1, Nina Theysohn3, Michael Forsting3, Ulrike Bingel2, Sigrid Elsenbruch1.   

Abstract

This functional magnetic resonance imaging study addressed similarities and differences in behavioral and neural responses to experimental visceral compared with somatic pain stimuli and explored the contribution of fear of pain to differences between pain modalities. In N = 22 healthy women, we assessed blood oxygen level-dependent responses to rectal distensions and cutaneous heat stimuli matched for perceived pain intensity. Fear of pain and pain unpleasantness were assessed before and after scanning. Visceral pain was more fear evoking and more unpleasant, and trial-by-trial intensity ratings failed to habituate across trials (all interactions modality × time: P < 0.01). Differences in fear of pain and pain intensity independently contributed to greater visceral pain unpleasantness (combined regression model: R(2) = 0.59). We observed joint neural activations in somatosensory cortex and frontoparietal attention network (conjunction analysis: all pFWE <0.05), but distensions induced greater activation in somatosensory cortex, dorsal and ventral anterior insula, dorsal anterior and midcingulate cortices, and brainstem, whereas cutaneous heat pain led to enhanced activation in posterior insula and hippocampus (all pFWE <0.05). Fear of visceral pain correlated with prefrontal activation, but did not consistently contribute to neural differences between modalities. These findings in healthy women support marked differences between phasic pain induced by rectal distensions vs cutaneous heat, likely reflecting the higher salience of visceral pain. More studies with clinically relevant pain models are needed to discern the role of fear in normal interindividual differences in the response to different types of pain and as a putative risk factor in the transition from acute to chronic pain.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28426553     DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000924

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pain        ISSN: 0304-3959            Impact factor:   6.961


  14 in total

1.  Internalizing Symptoms Mediate the Relation Between Acute Pain and Autism in Adults.

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Review 2.  [Pain is modality-specific : Differences in the perception and processing of interoceptive visceral compared to exteroceptive cutaneous heat pain stimuli].

Authors:  L R Koenen; S Elsenbruch
Journal:  Schmerz       Date:  2018-04       Impact factor: 1.107

3.  Does pain sensitivity correlate with gastrointestinal symptoms in runners? An observational survey study.

Authors:  Alex Ehlert; Patrick B Wilson
Journal:  Br J Pain       Date:  2021-06-30

4.  Associative learning and extinction of conditioned threat predictors across sensory modalities.

Authors:  Laura R Koenen; Robert J Pawlik; Adriane Icenhour; Ljubov Petrakova; Katarina Forkmann; Nina Theysohn; Harald Engler; Sigrid Elsenbruch
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2021-05-11

5.  Behavioural and neural responses to aversive visceral stimuli in women with primary dysmenorrhoea.

Authors:  Bettina Böttcher; Elke R Gizewski; Christian Siedentopf; Ruth Steiger; Michael Verius; David Riedl; Anja Ischebeck; Julia Schmid; Ludwig Wildt; Sigrid Elsenbruch
Journal:  Eur J Pain       Date:  2018-09-09       Impact factor: 3.931

6.  Brain Functional Alternations of the Pain-related Emotional and Cognitive Regions in Patients with Chronic Shoulder Pain.

Authors:  Jin-Ling Li; Chao-Qun Yan; Xu Wang; Shuai Zhang; Na Zhang; Shang-Qing Hu; Li-Qiong Wang; Cun-Zhi Liu
Journal:  J Pain Res       Date:  2020-03-20       Impact factor: 3.133

7.  Dissociable Posterior and Anterior Insula Activations in Processing Negative Stimulus Before and After the Application of Cognitive Reappraisals.

Authors:  Ze Zhang; Tingting Guo; Jin Fan; Xiaofei Wu; Tengteng Tan; Jing Luo
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2020-03-03

8.  Common and distinct neural representations of aversive somatic and visceral stimulation in healthy individuals.

Authors:  Lukas Van Oudenhove; Philip A Kragel; Patrick Dupont; Huynh Giao Ly; Els Pazmany; Paul Enzlin; Amandine Rubio; Chantal Delon-Martin; Bruno Bonaz; Qasim Aziz; Jan Tack; Shin Fukudo; Michiko Kano; Tor D Wager
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-11-23       Impact factor: 14.919

9.  Sex Differences Linking Pain-Related Fear and Interoceptive Hypervigilance: Attentional Biases to Conditioned Threat and Safety Signals in a Visceral Pain Model.

Authors:  Franziska Labrenz; Sopiko Knuf-Rtveliashvili; Sigrid Elsenbruch
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2020-03-24       Impact factor: 4.157

10.  The Role of Chronic Stress in Normal Visceroception: Insights From an Experimental Visceral Pain Study in Healthy Volunteers.

Authors:  Adriane Icenhour; Franziska Labrenz; Till Roderigo; Sven Benson; Sigrid Elsenbruch
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2020-03-03       Impact factor: 4.157

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