Literature DB >> 30189340

Evidence for a spinal involvement in temporal pain contrast enhancement.

Christian Sprenger1, Philip Stenmans2, Alexandra Tinnermann2, Christian Büchel2.   

Abstract

Spatiotemporal filtering and amplification of sensory information at multiple levels during the generation of perceptual representations is a fundamental processing principle of the nervous system. While for the visual and auditory system temporal filtering of sensory signals has been noticed for a long time, respective contrast mechanisms within the nociceptive system became only recently subject of investigations, mainly in the context of offset analgesia (OA) subsequent to noxious stimulus decreases. In the present study we corroborate in a first experiment the assumption that offset analgesia involves a central component by showing that an OA-like effect accounting for 74% of a corresponding OA reference can be evoked by decomposing the stimulus offset into two separate box-car stimuli applied within the same dermatome but to separate populations of primary afferent neurons. In order to draw conclusions about the levels of the CNS at which temporal filtering of nociceptive information takes place during OA we investigate in a second experiment neuronal activity in the spinal cord during a painful thermal stimulus offset employing high-resolution fMRI in healthy volunteers. Pain-related BOLD responses in the spinal cord were significantly reduced during OA and their time course followed widely behavioral hypoalgesia, but not the thermal stimulation profile. In summary, the results suggest that temporal pain contrast enhancement during OA comprises a central mechanism and this mechanism becomes already effective at the level of the spinal cord.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30189340     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.09.003

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


  7 in total

1.  Hyperalgesia and Reduced Offset Analgesia During Spinal Anesthesia.

Authors:  Elske Sitsen; Monique van Velzen; Mischa de Rover; Albert Dahan; Marieke Niesters
Journal:  J Pain Res       Date:  2020-08-24       Impact factor: 3.133

2.  Offset analgesia and onset hyperalgesia with different stimulus ranges.

Authors:  Jens Fust; Maria Lalouni; Viktor Vadenmark Lundqvist; Emil Wärnberg; Karin B Jensen
Journal:  Pain Rep       Date:  2021-03-24

3.  Onset hyperalgesia and offset analgesia: Transient increases or decreases of noxious thermal stimulus intensity robustly modulate subsequent perceived pain intensity.

Authors:  Benedict J Alter; Mya Sandi Aung; Irina A Strigo; Howard L Fields
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-12-08       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 4.  Brainstem Pain-Modulation Circuitry and Its Plasticity in Neuropathic Pain: Insights From Human Brain Imaging Investigations.

Authors:  Emily P Mills; Kevin A Keay; Luke A Henderson
Journal:  Front Pain Res (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-07-30

5.  Offset analgesia is associated with opposing modulation of medial versus dorsolateral prefrontal cortex activations: A functional near-infrared spectroscopy study.

Authors:  Benedict J Alter; Hendrik Santosa; Quynh H Nguyen; Theodore J Huppert; Ajay D Wasan
Journal:  Mol Pain       Date:  2022 Jan-Dec       Impact factor: 3.370

Review 6.  Traumatic and nontraumatic spinal cord injury: pathological insights from neuroimaging.

Authors:  Gergely David; Siawoosh Mohammadi; Allan R Martin; Julien Cohen-Adad; Nikolaus Weiskopf; Alan Thompson; Patrick Freund
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2019-10-31       Impact factor: 42.937

7.  Pain Control by Co-adaptive Learning in a Brain-Machine Interface.

Authors:  Suyi Zhang; Wako Yoshida; Hiroaki Mano; Takufumi Yanagisawa; Flavia Mancini; Kazuhisa Shibata; Mitsuo Kawato; Ben Seymour
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2020-08-13       Impact factor: 10.834

  7 in total

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