scholarly journals Abnormal Local Brain Activity Beyond the Pain Matrix in Postherpetic Neuralgia Patients: A Resting-State Functional MRI Study

2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (20;2) ◽  
pp. E303-E314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Buwei Yu

Background: Postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) patients suffer debilitating chronic pain, hyperalgesia, and allodynia, as well as emotional disorders such as insomnia, anxiety, and depression. The brain structure and functional basis of PHN are still not fully understood. Objectives: To identify the changes of regional brain activity in resting-state PHN patients using regional homogeneity (ReHo) and fractional aptitude of low-frequency fluctuation (fALFF) methods. Correlations between spontaneous pain intensity and ReHo or fALFF were analyzed. Study Design: Observational study. Setting: University hospital. Methods: ReHo, fALFF change was analyzed in 19 PHN patients and 19 healthy controls to detect the functional abnormality in the brains of PHN patients. Correlations between ReHo, fALFF, and PHN pain intensity were assessed in the PHN group. Results: PHN patients exhibited significantly abnormal ReHo and fALFF intensity in several brain regions, including the brainstem, thalamus, limbic system, temporal lobe, prefrontal lobe, and cerebellum compared with healthy controls. Correlation analysis showed that most of the ReHo values of the aforementioned brain regions positively correlated with visual analog scale (VAS) values. But much less correlation was found between fALFF and VAS. Limitations: (a) No specific emotional assessment was given for PHN patients before fMRI scans, therefore we cannot exclude whether the emotional disorders exist in these patients. (b) Relatively short pain duration (mean 5.4 months) and small sample size (n = 19) for the PHN group. Conclusions: For PHN patients, the local brain activity abnormality was not restricted to the pain matrix. Besides regions related to pain perception, areas in charge of affective processes, emotional activity, and pain modulation also showed abnormal local brain activity in a resting state, which may suggest complicated supraspinal function and plasticity change in PHN patients. ReHo was more closely correlated with pain intensity of PHN patients than fALFF. This work indicates that besides physical and emotional pain perception, mood disorder and pain modulation could be characteristics of PHN patients. This also supports the potential use of therapeutic interventions not only restricted to pain alleviation, but also those that attempt to ameliorate the cognitive and emotional comorbidities. Key words: Postherpetic neuralgia, resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI), mood disorder, limbic sy

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshio Tsuji ◽  
Fumiya Arikuni ◽  
Takafumi Sasaoka ◽  
Shin Suyama ◽  
Takashi Akiyoshi ◽  
...  

AbstractBrain activity associated with pain perception has been revealed by numerous PET and fMRI studies over the past few decades. These findings helped to establish the concept of the pain matrix, which is the distributed brain networks that demonstrate pain-specific cortical activities. We previously found that peripheral arterial stiffness $${\beta }_{\text{art}}$$ β art responds to pain intensity, which is estimated from electrocardiography, continuous sphygmomanometer, and photo-plethysmography. However, it remains unclear whether and to what extent $${\beta }_{\text{art}}$$ β art aligns with pain matrix brain activity. In this fMRI study, 22 participants received different intensities of pain stimuli. We identified brain regions in which the blood oxygen level-dependent signal covaried with $${\beta }_{\text{art}}$$ β art using parametric modulation analysis. Among the identified brain regions, the lateral and medial prefrontal cortex and ventral and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex were consistent with the pain matrix. We found moderate correlations between the average activities in these regions and $${\beta }_{\text{art}}$$ β art (r = 0.47, p < 0.001). $${\beta }_{\text{art}}$$ β art was also significantly correlated with self-reported pain intensity (r = 0.44, p < 0.001) and applied pain intensity (r = 0.43, p < 0.001). Our results indicate that $${\beta }_{\text{art}}$$ β art is positively correlated with pain-related brain activity and subjective pain intensity. This study may thus represent a basis for adopting peripheral arterial stiffness as an objective pain evaluation metric.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Peishan Dai ◽  
Jinlong Zhang ◽  
Jing Wu ◽  
Zailiang Chen ◽  
Beiji Zou ◽  
...  

Objective. This study is aimed at investigating differences in local brain activity and functional connectivity (FC) between children with unilateral amblyopia and healthy controls (HCs) by using resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). Methods. Local activity and FC analysis methods were used to explore the altered spontaneous brain activity of children with unilateral amblyopia. Local brain function analysis methods included the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF). FC analysis methods consisted of the FC between the primary visual cortex (PVC-FC) and other brain regions and the FC network between regions of interest (ROIs-FC) selected by independent component analysis. Results. The ALFF in the bilateral frontal, temporal, and occipital lobes in the amblyopia group was lower than that in the HCs. The weakened PVC-FC was mainly concentrated in the frontal lobe and the angular gyrus. The ROIs-FC between the default mode network, salience network, and primary visual cortex network (PVCN) were significantly reduced, whereas the ROIs-FC between the PVCN and the high-level visual cortex network were significantly increased in amblyopia. Conclusions. Unilateral amblyopia may reduce local brain activity and FC in the dorsal and ventral visual pathways and affect the top-down attentional control. Amblyopia may also alter FC between brain functional networks. These findings may help understand the pathological mechanisms of children with amblyopia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan L. Terrasa ◽  
Pedro Montoya ◽  
Carolina Sitges ◽  
Marian van der Meulen ◽  
Fernand Anton ◽  
...  

Alterations in the affective component of pain perception are related to the development of chronic pain and may contribute to the increased vulnerability to pain observed in aging. The present study analyzed age-related changes in resting-state brain activity and their possible relation to an increased pain perception in older adults. For this purpose, we compared EEG current source density and fMRI functional-connectivity at rest in older (n = 20, 66.21 ± 3.08 years) and younger adults (n = 21, 20.71 ± 2.30 years) and correlated those brain activity parameters with pain intensity and unpleasantness ratings elicited by painful stimulation. We found an age-related increase in beta2 and beta3 activity in temporal, frontal, and limbic areas, and a decrease in alpha activity in frontal areas. Moreover, older participants displayed increased functional connectivity in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the insula with precentral and postcentral gyrus. Finally, ACC beta3 activity was positively correlated with pain intensity and unpleasantness ratings in older, and ACC-precentral/postcentral gyrus connectivity was positively correlated with unpleasantness ratings in older and younger participants. These results reveal that ACC resting-state hyperactivity is a stable trait of brain aging and may underlie their characteristic altered pain perception.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene P. Duff ◽  
Fiona Moultrie ◽  
Marianne van der Vaart ◽  
Sezgi Goksan ◽  
Alexandra Abos ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundIn the absence of verbal communication it is challenging to infer an individual’s sensory and emotional experience. In adults, fMRI has been used to develop multivariate brain activity signatures, which reliably capture elements of human pain experience. We translate whole-brain fMRI signatures that encode pain perception in adults to the newborn infant brain, to advance understanding of functional brain development and pain perception in early life.MethodsA cohort of adults (n=10; mean age=28.3 years) and 2 cohorts of healthy infants (Cohort A: n=15; Cohort B: n=22; mean postnatal age=3 days) were stimulated with low intensity nociceptive stimuli (64-512mN) during acquisition of functional MRI data. fMRI pain signatures were applied directly to the adult data and transformed such that they could be applied to the infant brain. In each cohort, we assessed the concordance of the signatures with the brain responses using cosine-similarity scores, and we assessed stimulus intensity encoding of the signature responses using Spearman rank correlation. Brain activity in ‘pro-pain’ and ‘anti-pain’ brain regions were also examined.FindingsThe Neurologic Pain Signature (NPS), which reflects aspects of nociceptive pain experience, was activated in both the adults and infants, and reliably encoded stimulus intensity. However, the Stimulus Intensity Independent Pain Signature (SIIPS1), which reflects higher-level cognitive modulation of nociceptive input, was only expressed in adults. ‘Pro-pain’ brain regions showed similar activation patterns in adults and infants, whereas, ‘anti-pain’ brain regions exhibited divergent responses.InterpretationBasic intensity encoding of nociceptive information is similar in adults and infants. However, translation of adult brain signatures into infants reveals significant differences in infant cerebral processing of nociceptive information, which may reflect their lack of expectation, motivation and contextualisation. This study expands the use of brain activity pain signatures to non-verbal patients and provides a potential approach to assess analgesic interventions in infancy.FundingThis work was funded by Wellcome (Senior Research Fellowship awarded to Prof. Rebeccah Slater) and SSNAP “Support for Sick and Newborn Infants and their Parents” Medical Research Fund (University of Oxford Excellence Fellowship awarded to Dr Eugene Duff).Research in contextEvidence before this studyWe searched PubMed for research articles published prior to March 2020 using terms including ‘fMRI’, ‘infant or neonate’, and ‘pain or nociception’ in the title or abstract. Due to the relatively new emergence of this field, and the experimental and analytical challenges involved in studying cerebral processing of pain in the MRI environment in healthy newborn infants, only five fMRI studies have examined infant brain responses to nociceptive input.In a foundational pilot study, Williams et al., applied an experimental noxious stimulus to a single infant, evoking widespread brain activity that included several brain regions involved in pain processing in adults. Goksan et al., subsequently performed an observational cohort study and used regional analyses to compare active brain regions in infants (n=10) and adults (n=10), concluding that the evoked patterns of brain activity were broadly similar in infants and adults. Further follow-up analysis in the infant cohort revealed that the functional connectivity of brain regions involved in descending pain modulation influences the magnitude of pain-related brain activity. Two further studies focused on methodological advances, providing evidence-based recommendations for fMRI acquisition parameters and image processing in order to maximise the quality of infant data, and these methods have been implemented in this study.Added value of this studyThis study translates validated adult pain fMRI brain signatures to a nonverbal patient population in which the assessment and management of pain presents a significant clinical challenge. Application of fMRI brain signatures to newborn infants expands on previous fMRI studies that provided only qualitative evidence that noxious stimulation commonly activates brain regions in the adult and infant brain. Here we demonstrate that the basic encoding of the sensory discriminative aspects of pain, as represented by the Neurologic Pain Signature (NPS), occurs in both adults and infants, whereas higher-level cognitive modulation of pain, represented by the Stimulus Intensity Independent Pain Signature (SIIPS1) is only present in adults and not observed in infants. The differences in how the immature infant brain processes pain, relative to the mature adult brain, are likely to reflect differences in their expectation, motivation and contextualisation of external events rather than differences in their core nociceptive cerebral processing of pain. This work allows us to use quantitative fMRI observations to make stronger inferences related to pain experience in nonverbal infants.Implications of all the available evidenceBehavioural pain scores used in neonatal clinical care offer limited sensitivity and specificity to pain. Neonatal clinical trials that use these scores as outcome measures frequently report a lack of efficacy of common analgesic interventions, resulting in few evidence-based drugs for treating pain. The value of using brain-based neuroimaging markers of pain as a means of providing objective evidence of analgesic efficacy in early proof of concept studies is well recognised in adults, even in the absence of behavioural pain modulation. Similarly, in infants EEG-based measures of noxious-evoked brain activity have been used as outcome measures in clinical trials of analgesics to overcome some of the inherent limitations of using behavioural observations to quantify analgesic efficacy. Considering the successful translation of the Neurologic Pain Signature (NPS) and its sensitivity to analgesic modulation in adults, this novel methodology represents an objective brain-based fMRI approach that could be used to advance the discovery and assessment of analgesic interventions in infancy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yutong Zhang ◽  
Ziwen Wang ◽  
Jiarong Du ◽  
Jixin Liu ◽  
Tao Xu ◽  
...  

Background: Menstrual migraine without aura (MMoA) refers to a specific type of migraine that is associated with the female ovarian cycle. It is particularly serious and has brought huge life pressure and mental burden to female patients. Acupuncture has been commonly used to prevent migraines and relieve concomitant emotional disorders; however, the physiological mechanism underlying this intervention remains unclear. This study aimed to use resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) to investigate whether acupuncture can modulate brain function and if the potential influence on brain activity correlates with improving emotional symptoms in MMoA patients.Methods: Overall, 44 patients were randomly divided into a true acupuncture (TA) group and the sham acupuncture (SA) group. Patients underwent rsfMRI before and after 3-month treatment, the amplitude of low-frequency fuctuations (ALFF) and regional homogeneity (ReHo) in rsfMRI were calculated. Zung self-rating anxiety scale (SAS), Zung self-rating depression scale (SDS), frequency of migraine attacks, visual analog scale, and intensity of the migraine were used for evaluate the clinical effect. The clinical changes of variables were also used to further assess the correlation with brain activity in MMoA patients.Results: After acupuncture treatment, the emotional symptoms of both groups of patients improved, and the clinical symptoms of migraine were alleviated. The major finding of our study was that patients with MMoA showed lower ALFF value in the left anterior cingulate and the value was positively correlated with the decreases in the SAS and SDS scores. In the SA group, common brain regions responded both in ALFF and regional homogeneity values mainly in the insula, and no significant correlations were observed between brain regions and clinical variables.Conclusions: These results indicated that both two acupuncture treatments were helpful in treating migraine and could improve emotion symptoms. TA had a relatively better effect in reducing the frequency of migraine attack than SA. The two therapies have different modulation effects as TA regulates emotional disorders by modulating the frontal-limbic regions, and SA may modulate pain perception through the placebo effect on insula and by indirectly regulating emotional disorders. These findings provided evidence that acupuncture is a complementary and alternative therapy to relieve clinical symptoms in female patients with migraines and could help enhance clinical diagnosis and treatment.Clinical Trial Registration: [http://www.chictr.org.cn/index.aspx], identifier [ChiCTR-IOR-15006648. Registered 23 June 2015].


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 651-661
Author(s):  
Paulo E. P. Teixeira ◽  
Hanan I. Zehry ◽  
Swapnali Chaudhari ◽  
Laura Dipietro ◽  
Felipe Fregni

AbstractBackground and aimsPain is a disabling symptom in knee osteoarthritis (KOA) and its underlying mechanism remains poorly understood. Dysfunction of descending pain modulatory pathways and reduced pain inhibition enhance pain facilitation in many chronic pain syndromes but do not fully explain pain levels in chronic musculoskeletal conditions. The objective of this study is to explore the association of clinical variables with pain intensity perception in KOA individuals with varying levels of Conditioned Pain Modulation (CPM) response.MethodsThis is a cross-sectional, exploratory analysis using baseline data of a randomized clinical trial investigating the effects of a non-invasive brain stimulation treatment on the perception of pain and functional limitations due to KOA. Sixty-three subjects with KOA were included in this study. Data on pain perception, mood perception, self-reported depression, physical function, quality of life, and quantitative sensory testing was collected. Multiple linear regression analysis was performed to explore the association between the clinical variables with pain perception for individuals with different levels of CPM response.ResultsFor KOA patients with limited CPM response, perception of limitations at work/other activities due to emotional problems and stress scores were statistically significantly associated with pain scores, F(2, 37) = 7.02, p < 0.01. R-squared = 0.275. For KOA patients with normal CPM response, general health perception scores were statistically significantly associated with pain scores, F(1, 21) = 5.60, p < 0.05. R-squared = 0.2104. Limitations of this study include methodology details, small sample size and study design characteristics.ConclusionsPain intensity perception is associated differently with clinical variables according to the individual CPM response. Mechanistic models to explain pain perception in these two subgroups of KOA subjects are discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adeline Jabès ◽  
Giuliana Klencklen ◽  
Paolo Ruggeri ◽  
Christoph M. Michel ◽  
Pamela Banta Lavenex ◽  
...  

AbstractAlterations of resting-state EEG microstates have been associated with various neurological disorders and behavioral states. Interestingly, age-related differences in EEG microstate organization have also been reported, and it has been suggested that resting-state EEG activity may predict cognitive capacities in healthy individuals across the lifespan. In this exploratory study, we performed a microstate analysis of resting-state brain activity and tested allocentric spatial working memory performance in healthy adult individuals: twenty 25–30-year-olds and twenty-five 64–75-year-olds. We found a lower spatial working memory performance in older adults, as well as age-related differences in the five EEG microstate maps A, B, C, C′ and D, but especially in microstate maps C and C′. These two maps have been linked to neuronal activity in the frontal and parietal brain regions which are associated with working memory and attention, cognitive functions that have been shown to be sensitive to aging. Older adults exhibited lower global explained variance and occurrence of maps C and C′. Moreover, although there was a higher probability to transition from any map towards maps C, C′ and D in young and older adults, this probability was lower in older adults. Finally, although age-related differences in resting-state EEG microstates paralleled differences in allocentric spatial working memory performance, we found no evidence that any individual or combination of resting-state EEG microstate parameter(s) could reliably predict individual spatial working memory performance. Whether the temporal dynamics of EEG microstates may be used to assess healthy cognitive aging from resting-state brain activity requires further investigation.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Kangyu Jin ◽  
Zhe Shen ◽  
Guoxun Feng ◽  
Zhiyong Zhao ◽  
Jing Lu ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective: A few former studies suggested there are partial overlaps in abnormal brain structure and cognitive function between Hypochondriasis (HS) and schizophrenia (SZ). But their differences in brain activity and cognitive function were unclear. Methods: 21 HS patients, 23 SZ patients, and 24 healthy controls (HC) underwent Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) with the regional homogeneity analysis (ReHo), subsequently exploring the relationship between ReHo value and cognitive functions. The support vector machines (SVM) were used on effectiveness evaluation of ReHo for differentiating HS from SZ. Results: Compared with HC, HS showed significantly increased ReHo values in right middle temporal gyrus (MTG), left inferior parietal lobe (IPL) and right fusiform gyrus (FG), while SZ showed increased ReHo in left insula, decreased ReHo values in right paracentral lobule. Additionally, HS showed significantly higher ReHo values in FG, MTG and left paracentral lobule but lower in insula than SZ. The higher ReHo values in insula were associated with worse performance in MCCB in HS group. SVM analysis showed a combination of the ReHo values in insula and FG was able to satisfactorily distinguish the HS and SZ patients. Conclusion: our results suggested the altered default mode network (DMN), of which abnormal spontaneous neural activity occurs in multiple brain regions, might play a key role in the pathogenesis of HS, and the resting-state alterations of insula closely related to cognitive dysfunction in HS. Furthermore, the combination of the ReHo in FG and insula was a relatively ideal indicator to distinguish HS from SZ.


Author(s):  
Andrea Duggento ◽  
Marta Bianciardi ◽  
Luca Passamonti ◽  
Lawrence L. Wald ◽  
Maria Guerrisi ◽  
...  

The causal, directed interactions between brain regions at rest (brain–brain networks) and between resting-state brain activity and autonomic nervous system (ANS) outflow (brain–heart links) have not been completely elucidated. We collected 7 T resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data with simultaneous respiration and heartbeat recordings in nine healthy volunteers to investigate (i) the causal interactions between cortical and subcortical brain regions at rest and (ii) the causal interactions between resting-state brain activity and the ANS as quantified through a probabilistic, point-process-based heartbeat model which generates dynamical estimates for sympathetic and parasympathetic activity as well as sympathovagal balance. Given the high amount of information shared between brain-derived signals, we compared the results of traditional bivariate Granger causality (GC) with a globally conditioned approach which evaluated the additional influence of each brain region on the causal target while factoring out effects concomitantly mediated by other brain regions. The bivariate approach resulted in a large number of possibly spurious causal brain–brain links, while, using the globally conditioned approach, we demonstrated the existence of significant selective causal links between cortical/subcortical brain regions and sympathetic and parasympathetic modulation as well as sympathovagal balance. In particular, we demonstrated a causal role of the amygdala, hypothalamus, brainstem and, among others, medial, middle and superior frontal gyri, superior temporal pole, paracentral lobule and cerebellar regions in modulating the so-called central autonomic network (CAN). In summary, we show that, provided proper conditioning is employed to eliminate spurious causalities, ultra-high-field functional imaging coupled with physiological signal acquisition and GC analysis is able to quantify directed brain–brain and brain–heart interactions reflecting central modulation of ANS outflow.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Nakano ◽  
Masahiro Takamura ◽  
Haruki Nishimura ◽  
Maro Machizawa ◽  
Naho Ichikawa ◽  
...  

AbstractNeurofeedback (NF) aptitude, which refers to an individual’s ability to change its brain activity through NF training, has been reported to vary significantly from person to person. The prediction of individual NF aptitudes is critical in clinical NF applications. In the present study, we extracted the resting-state functional brain connectivity (FC) markers of NF aptitude independent of NF-targeting brain regions. We combined the data in fMRI-NF studies targeting four different brain regions at two independent sites (obtained from 59 healthy adults and six patients with major depressive disorder) to collect the resting-state fMRI data associated with aptitude scores in subsequent fMRI-NF training. We then trained the regression models to predict the individual NF aptitude scores from the resting-state fMRI data using a discovery dataset from one site and identified six resting-state FCs that predicted NF aptitude. Next we validated the prediction model using independent test data from another site. The result showed that the posterior cingulate cortex was the functional hub among the brain regions and formed predictive resting-state FCs, suggesting NF aptitude may be involved in the attentional mode-orientation modulation system’s characteristics in task-free resting-state brain activity.


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