| Literature DB >> 34757810 |
Nicole Mercer Lindsay1,2, Chong Chen1, Gadi Gilam3, Sean Mackey3, Grégory Scherrer1,4.
Abstract
Pain is a multidimensional experience with sensory-discriminative, affective-motivational, and cognitive-evaluative components. Pain aversiveness is one principal cause of suffering for patients with chronic pain, motivating research and drug development efforts to investigate and modulate neural activity in the brain’s circuits encoding pain unpleasantness. Here, we review progress in understanding the organization of emotion, motivation, cognition, and descending modulation circuits for pain perception. We describe the molecularly defined neuron types that collectively shape pain multidimensionality and its aversive quality. We also review how pharmacological, stimulation, neurofeedback, surgical, and cognitive-behavioral interventions alter activity in these circuits to relieve chronic pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34757810 PMCID: PMC8675872 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abj7360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956