Literature DB >> 31389754

Cerebral peak alpha frequency reflects average pain severity in a human model of sustained, musculoskeletal pain.

Andrew J Furman1,2,3, Tribikram Thapa4, Simon J Summers4, Rocco Cavaleri4, Jack S Fogarty5, Genevieve Z Steiner5,6, Siobhan M Schabrun7, David A Seminowicz1,2.   

Abstract

Heightened pain sensitivity, the amount of pain experienced in response to a noxious event, is a known risk factor for development of chronic pain. We have previously reported that pain-free, sensorimotor peak alpha frequency (PAF) is a reliable biomarker of pain sensitivity for thermal, prolonged pains lasting tens of minutes. To test whether PAF can provide information about pain sensitivity occurring over clinically relevant timescales (i.e., weeks), EEG was recorded before and while participants experienced a long-lasting pain model, repeated intramuscular injection of nerve growth factor (NGF), that produces progressively developing muscle pain for up to 21 days. We demonstrate that pain-free, sensorimotor PAF is negatively correlated with NGF pain sensitivity; increasingly slower PAF is associated with increasingly greater pain sensitivity. Furthermore, PAF remained stable following NGF injection, indicating that the presence of NGF pain for multiple weeks is not sufficient to induce the PAF slowing reported in chronic pain. In total, our results demonstrate that slower pain-free, sensorimotor PAF is associated with heightened sensitivity to a long-lasting musculoskeletal pain and also suggest that the apparent slowing of PAF in chronic pain may reflect predisease pain sensitivity.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Pain sensitivity, the intensity of pain experienced after injury, has been identified as an important risk factor in the development of chronic pain. Biomarkers of pain sensitivity have the potential to ease chronic pain burdens by preventing disease emergence. In the current study, we demonstrate that the speed of pain-free, sensorimotor peak alpha frequency recorded during resting-state EEG predicts pain sensitivity to a clinically-relevant, human model of prolonged pain that persists for weeks.

Entities:  

Keywords:  EEG; biomarker; nerve growth factor; pain sensitivity

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31389754      PMCID: PMC6843105          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00279.2019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  39 in total

1.  Automated characterization of multiple alpha peaks in multi-site electroencephalograms.

Authors:  A K I Chiang; C J Rennie; P A Robinson; J A Roberts; M K Rigozzi; R W Whitehouse; R J Hamilton; E Gordon
Journal:  J Neurosci Methods       Date:  2007-11-13       Impact factor: 2.390

2.  Alpha frequency, cognitive load and memory performance.

Authors:  W Klimesch; H Schimke; G Pfurtscheller
Journal:  Brain Topogr       Date:  1993       Impact factor: 3.020

3.  Prediction of experimental pain sensitivity by attention to pain-related stimuli in healthy individuals.

Authors:  Corinna Baum; Claudia Huber; Raphaela Schneider; Stefan Lautenbacher
Journal:  Percept Mot Skills       Date:  2011-06

4.  Operculoinsular cortex encodes pain intensity at the earliest stages of cortical processing as indicated by amplitude of laser-evoked potentials in humans.

Authors:  G D Iannetti; L Zambreanu; G Cruccu; I Tracey
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 3.590

5.  Motor Cortex Reorganization and Impaired Function in the Transition to Sustained Muscle Pain.

Authors:  S M Schabrun; S W Christensen; N Mrachacz-Kersting; T Graven-Nielsen
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2015-01-21       Impact factor: 5.357

6.  Neonatal Anti-NGF Treatment Reduces the Adelta- and C-Fibre Evoked Vasodilator Responses in Rat Skin: Evidence That Nociceptor Afferents Mediate Antidromic Vasodilatation.

Authors:  G R Lewin; S J Lisney; L M Mendell
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 3.386

7.  Repeated intramuscular injections of nerve growth factor induced progressive muscle hyperalgesia, facilitated temporal summation, and expanded pain areas.

Authors:  Koei Hayashi; Shinichiro Shiozawa; Noriyuki Ozaki; Kazue Mizumura; Thomas Graven-Nielsen
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2013-07-16       Impact factor: 6.961

Review 8.  Sleep deprivation and vigilant attention.

Authors:  Julian Lim; David F Dinges
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 5.691

9.  Global, regional, and national incidence, prevalence, and years lived with disability for 310 diseases and injuries, 1990-2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-10-08       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  Corticostriatal functional connectivity predicts transition to chronic back pain.

Authors:  Marwan N Baliki; Bogdan Petre; Souraya Torbey; Kristina M Herrmann; Lejian Huang; Thomas J Schnitzer; Howard L Fields; A Vania Apkarian
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2012-07-01       Impact factor: 24.884

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  7 in total

1.  Sensorimotor Peak Alpha Frequency Is a Reliable Biomarker of Prolonged Pain Sensitivity.

Authors:  Andrew J Furman; Mariya Prokhorenko; Michael L Keaser; Jing Zhang; Shuo Chen; Ali Mazaheri; David A Seminowicz
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2020-11-03       Impact factor: 5.357

Review 2.  Analytic consistency and neural correlates of peak alpha frequency in the study of pain.

Authors:  Natalie J McLain; Moheb S Yani; Jason J Kutch
Journal:  J Neurosci Methods       Date:  2021-12-24       Impact factor: 2.987

3.  A Hidden Markov Model reveals magnetoencephalography spectral frequency-specific abnormalities of brain state power and phase-coupling in neuropathic pain.

Authors:  Camille Fauchon; Junseok A Kim; Rima El-Sayed; Natalie R Osborne; Anton Rogachov; Joshua C Cheng; Kasey S Hemington; Rachael L Bosma; Benjamin T Dunkley; Jiwon Oh; Anuj Bhatia; Robert D Inman; Karen Deborah Davis
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-09-21

4.  Exploring patient perceptions of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation as a treatment for chronic musculoskeletal pain: a qualitative study.

Authors:  Georgia Stillianesis; Rocco Cavaleri; Simon J Summers; Clarice Tang
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-08-02       Impact factor: 3.006

5.  Relief of chronic pain associated with increase in midline frontal theta power.

Authors:  Nabi Rustamov; Elizabeth A Wilson; Alexandra E Fogarty; Lara W Crock; Eric C Leuthardt; Simon Haroutounian
Journal:  Pain Rep       Date:  2022-10-10

6.  A novel cortical biomarker signature for predicting pain sensitivity: protocol for the PREDICT longitudinal analytical validation study.

Authors:  David A Seminowicz; Katarzyna Bilska; Nahian S Chowdhury; Patrick Skippen; Samantha K Millard; Alan K I Chiang; Shuo Chen; Andrew J Furman; Siobhan M Schabrun
Journal:  Pain Rep       Date:  2020-07-27

7.  No indications for altered EEG oscillatory activity in patients with chronic post-burn itch compared to healthy controls.

Authors:  Samantha K Millard; Klara Bokelmann; Rik Schalbroeck; Nic J A van der Wee; Nancy E E van Loey; Antoinette I M van Laarhoven
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-03-25       Impact factor: 4.996

  7 in total

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