Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Higher pain processing
- Preception
- Attention
- medial/ lateral pathways
Anmerkungen:
- Kulkarni et al (2005)
medial- affective-motivational
lateral- senso-discriminative
- Expectation of Pain
- Perceived threat of Pain
- Prior experience
- Animals
- Neurophysiological pathways
- 'Pain Matrix'
Anmerkungen:
- How does the pain matrix function to
produce the sensation of pain?
? pattern of
activation within the pain matrix – flow and integration of information?
- do specific areas of
the pain matrix serve specialized sub functions & encode different aspects
of the pain experience?
- Def- a network of cortical areas through which pain is generated from nociception
- Legrain et al
- Salience detection system
Anmerkungen:
- New idea- based on the controversy
Anlagen:
- saliency for threat detection
Anmerkungen:
-
While neural responses to nociceptive stimuli probably
reflects detection of saliency, it doesn’t mean that these brain responses are
not important for pain- potentially this system is useful for the detection of potential
physical threats associated with pain, but not exclusively pain
Therefore, the present interpretation of the salience
detection system suggests that its activity underlies a crucial function for
all sensory systems, including the nociceptive system, providing the ability to
detect and to orient selectively attention to significant sensory events, in
particular those that could represent a potential threat.
- Pain is predominant?
Anmerkungen:
- One could argue that, as compared to other sensory modalities, the nociceptive
system could be more predominantly involved in the detection of salience
- high-threshold receptors
- Alodynia
Anmerkungen:
- studies have shown that if a nociceptive stimulus is applied at a specific body
location, it enhances the responses of wide dynamic range (WDR) neurons at the
segmental level of the dorsal horn receiving inputs from that body location and
concurrently inhibits the responses of WDR neurons originating from all other
body locations.
- not different mechanisms
Anmerkungen:
- However, there is no reason to consider that the
cortical processing of the inherently highly salient content
of nociceptive input should involve different mechanisms or structures than
those involved in the cortical processing of the salience content of
non-nociceptive input.
- Evidence
- Neuropsychological
- insular lesions
Anmerkungen:
-
o
the patients were able to recognize nociceptive
stimuli as painful, the stimuli did not elicit a feeling of
unpleasantness, nor did they elicit withdrawal motor reactions or emotional
facial expressions.
>>
patients also failed to react to viewing approaching objects such as
threatening gestures against their body.
- complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)
Anmerkungen:
- demonstrating neglect-like behaviors in the affected limbs, but they are not tied to the side of affected limb, but to the space where the affected limb normally resides
>> These
observations show clearly that the deficits observed in CRPS patients are based
on a spatial representation of the body that is independent of the somatotopic
localization of the symptoms.
- Salience
- What is it?
Anmerkungen:
- the salience of a stimulus is determined by how much it contrasts, along one or
more physical dimensions, from its surrounding
- Salience is also determined according to the past context and memories
- Adaptive behaviour
Anmerkungen:
- processing salient events in a sensory environment contributes to selecting new/different
events which take priority as they might have an adaptive role- e.g. to
flight or flee from danger
- Detection
Anmerkungen:
-
o
the detection of local contrasts along various
physical dimensions
o
the detection of transient variations in the
flow of afferent energy
o
the detection of a mismatch between the afferent
sensory input and a memory template of recent past events
- Why?
- Prioritising important stimuli
- improve the perception of important stimuli
- prompt action
- Salience stimuli
Anmerkungen:
- factors contributing to salience of a stimuli
- Novelty
Anmerkungen:
- novel events are salient because they are completely new or because they deviate from the expectations built from recent past experiences.
- sharpness of stimuli onset
Anmerkungen:
- suddenness of its appearance
- stimulus deviance
Anmerkungen:
- stimulus intensity
- +
- Legrain et al labs
- novel stimulus
Anmerkungen:
- stimulus novelty enhances the magnitude of
nociceptive event-related
magnetic fields( ERPs)
and disrupts consecutively ongoing task performance
>>supports salience detection- salient sensory input is enhanced and receives more attention as compared to less salient sensory input
- Previous experiments
Anmerkungen:
- The differences in stimulus salience (i.e. ability
to stand out relative to neighboring stimuli) could account for all the
previous evidence (electrophysiology/ neuroimaging)
- magnitude response
- innocuous stimuli
- Attention
Anmerkungen:
-
o
Attention studies- the more background noise,
the more difficult it is to detect the nociceptive stimuli>> reduced magnitude
of ERPs
>> the magnitude of the elicited brain responses does not depend only on
the absolute intensity of the nociceptive stimulus, but also on the contrast
between its intensity and the intensity of the surrounding input, and, hence,
its salience
- assists attentional
systems in threat detection
Anmerkungen:
- detection of salience could be used as a mechanism to assist attentional systems in
localizing the stimuli that are the most susceptible to signal an important
change, such as a threat, occurring in the proximal space surrounding the body
- Electrophysiology
Anmerkungen:
- o Electrophysiology in primates frontal/ parietal
lobes- found neurons that response to multimodal threats occurring in the space
proximal to the body and that participate to defensive behaviours
- Frontal/ parietal
- processing of sensory input
Anmerkungen:
- Other functions-
·
selectively biasing the cortical processing of
incoming sensory inputs according to their salience and their relevance
- coordination of perception and action
Anmerkungen:
- Map sensory info
Anmerkungen:
- specific parieto-frontal networks -
map sensory information according to specific
representation frames for the purpose of particular actions (e.g., retinal
space for saccades, peripersonal space for grasping, extrapersonal space for reaching)
- The frame that maps multimodal events in the space surrounding the body is
conceptualized by the notion of peripersonal space, i.e., a representation of
the body and environment within grasp
- hypothesis
Anmerkungen:
- the salience detection system represents mechanisms by which attentional systems
are informed about changes in the representations of the body.
- Pain matrix- what is it really?
Anmerkungen:
-
>> what has been previously labeled as the “pain matrix” would no longer constitute a
sensory-specific cortical network, but, instead, it would constitute an
action-specific cortical network representing the activity by which the individual is able to identify and responds adequately to an immediate threat.
- Part of a threat detection system
- Brain regions
- Somatosensory (S1, S2)
- S2
- Noxious stimuli
Anmerkungen:
- using implanted intracerebral electrodes in epileptic patients stimulation of S2 elicits report of pain
- Magnitude-intesity
Anmerkungen:
- Magnitude of the response in the area correlates
with the intensity of pain perception
- using fMRI/ PET
- S1
- Anterior cingulate (ACC)
- Magnitude-intesity
- amygdala
- Prefrontal
- Insula
- innocuous stimuli
Anmerkungen:
- EEG/ fMRI studies-
These brain areas responded to tactile, auditory and visual stimuli
- lesions
Anmerkungen:
-
o
the patients were able to recognize nociceptive
stimuli as painful, the stimuli did not elicit a feeling of
unpleasantness, nor did they elicit withdrawal motor reactions or emotional
facial expressions.
>>
patients also failed to react to viewing approaching objects such as
threatening gestures against their body.
- +
Anmerkungen:
- evidence for the pain matrix
- noxious stimuli
Anmerkungen:
- Cortical structures constituting the pain matrix are
activated by nociceptive stimuli
- magnitude response- intensity of pain
Anmerkungen:
-
§Magnitude of the response in the pain matrix correlates
with the intensity of pain perception (self report)
- PET/ fMRI
Anmerkungen:
- >> show that magnitude of the hemodynamic
responses in SI, SII, the insula and the anterior cingulate cortex can reliably
predict the amount of pain perceived
Correlation between intensity of stimuli and
amplitude of responses
- EEG/ MEG
Anmerkungen:
- magnetic fields (ERFs) elicited by nociceptive stimuli, and originating from
operculo-insular, post-central and cingulate areas, i.e., from brain regions belonging to the “pain matrix, may correlate with the physical intensity of the stimuli, and, even more, with the perceived intensity of pain
- Experimental manipulations
Anmerkungen:
- Experimental manipulations modulate different
aspects of the pain experience modulate activity within the pain matrix (e.g.
analgesia administration, placebo effects)
- Attention
Anmerkungen:
- distracting subjects’ attention away from the nociceptive stimulus may result concomitantly in a decrease of pain rating and a decrease of the magnitude of the elicited brain
responses
- Drugs
- Stimulation
Anmerkungen:
- Stimulation of discrete areas of the pain matrix can cause the sensation of pain
- -
Anmerkungen:
- Evidence against the pain matrix
- NS neurons
Anmerkungen:
-
NS neurons (neurons
responding to high intensity stimuli) are sparsely distributed in the pain
matrix
- Is nociception a modality?
Anmerkungen:
-
at a cortical level nociception may not be represented as a distinct sensory modality?
- Innocuous stimuli
Anmerkungen:
-
when NS specific
neurons are identified they often respond to high intensity stimuli of other modalities e.g. auditory stimuli
- EEG/ fMRI
Anmerkungen:
-
o
EEG and fMRI studies- nociceptive, tactile,
auditory and visual stimuli can elicit spatially indistinguishable responses in the insula, the anterior cingulate cortex and the largest part of SII
o
>> thus indicating that the bulk of the
brain responses to nociceptive stimuli reflects multimodal neural activity
(i.e., activity that can be triggered by any kind of stimulus independently of
sensory modality)
-
o
the only fraction of the
brain responses elicited by nociceptive stimuli that was not explained by
multimodal neural activity, located in SI and a small portion of SII, could be
explained by somatosensory-specific activity that was not nociceptive-specific
(i.e., activity that can be triggered by both nociceptive and tactile
somatosensory stimuli).
- Novel information
Anmerkungen:
- Pain related brain areas also responded to stimuli carrying novel information
- Magnitude-repsonse
Anmerkungen:
- The magnitude of the responses in that network may be dissociated from the subjective intensity of pain as well as from the physical intensity of the nociceptive stimulus
- Iannettie et al (2008)
Anmerkungen:
- o
delivered trains of three identical nociceptive
laser pulses with a constant 1-second inter-stimulus interval, using four
different stimulus intensities.
o
Following the first stimulus of the train, the
magnitude of the elicited ERPs was strongly related to the perceived intensity
of pain, and both were related to the actual intensity of the nociceptive
stimulus.
o
In contrast, following the second and third
stimuli, the relationship between the magnitude of ERPs and the magnitude of
perceived pain intensity was markedly disrupted.
>> stimulus repetition decreased significantly the magnitude of nociceptive ERPs,
but did not affect the perception of pain intensity
- Clark et al (2008)
Anmerkungen:
-
o
presented nociceptive laser stimuli cued by a
visual signal preceding the nociceptive stimulus with a variable time delay.
Duration of the delay could be predicted or not predicted by the participants.
They observed that the perceived intensity of pain and the magnitude of the
elicited ERPs were affected differently by the delay separating the visual cue
and the nociceptive stimulus. Longer duration delays led to an increased
intensity of perception. In contrast, the magnitude of ERPs did not depend on
the duration of the delay, but on whether or not this delay was predictable,
being larger when the delay was unpredictable.
- Mouraux and Plaghki (2007)
Anmerkungen:
- o EEG-
delivered nociceptive stimuli either alone or
shortly after an innocuous somatosensory stimulus. o
>> The intensity of perception induced by
the nociceptive stimuli was not different between the two conditions. o
In contrast, the nociceptive stimuli presented
after a tactile stimulus elicited ERPs of reduced magnitude relatively to the
ERPs elicited by single nociceptive stimuli.
- - neural activity and pain
Anmerkungen:
-
>> These different examples all show that the
neural activity recorded in the so-called “pain matrix”
cannot be considered as a direct correlate of the conscious perception of a
somatosensory stimulus as painful.
- Impaired attention
- Tiede et al. (2011)
Anmerkungen:
- showed
that sleep deprivation attenuates the magnitude of ERPs evoked by nociceptive
stimuli but tends to amplify the perception of pain. In this study, sleep
deprivation suppressed the modulator effect of attention on pain ratings, but
did not suppress its effect on ERP amplitude
- Bastuji et al. (2008)
Anmerkungen:
- delivered short series of nociceptive stimuli to
healthy sleeping subjects, using an intensity that was clearly perceived and
qualified as painful when awake.
>> 70% of the stimuli did not produce any arousal reaction, and only 11%
of the stimuli triggered an electromyographic response.
o
In contrast, nociceptive stimuli elicited
reproducible ERPs, albeit of reduced magnitude, both during stage 2 and
paradoxical sleep.
- Legrain et al (2011)
- Medial and lateral pain systems
Anlagen:
- Lateral?- Senso-discriminative
Anmerkungen:
-
Where
does it hurt?
Stimulus localization
How
much does it hurt?
Intensity
Quality
discrimination
Heat ? Pressure?
- Medial- Affective-motivational
Anmerkungen:
-
Pain unpleasantness
“I don’t like it”
Stimulus related attention
Drive to stop the stimulus
-
Virtually all PET studies show activation of the ACC associated with pain unpleasantness
Functionallyheterogeneous brain area that has been associated with integration of effect,cognition, social behaviour. Still debated whether there is a specific pain area in theACC
- Kulkarni et al (2005)
Anmerkungen:
-
Methods- PET in
human volunteers, using a CO2 laser as nociceptive stimuli (selectively
activates A-delta, C-fibres without contamination by touch).
Measure the cerebral responses to noxious and innocuous laser stimuli
Results-
·
Attention to location
increased responses in the contralateral (right) primary somatosensory and
inferior parietal cortices >> This result implies that these components
of the lateral pain system are
concerned mainly with the localization of pain
·
attention to unpleasantness
increased responses in bilateral perigenual cingulate and orbitofrontal
cortices, contralateral (right) amygdala, ipsilateral (left) hypothalamus,
posterior insula, M1 and frontal pole>> These areas comprise key
components of the medial pain and
neuroendocrine systems and the results suggest that they have a role in the
affective response to pain
>> Our results indicate the importance of attentional effects on the pattern of nociceptive processing in the brain. They also provide the first clear demonstration, within a single experiment, of a
major division of function within the neural pain matrix.
- Animals
- Fish
- Trout
- Nociceptive fibres
Anmerkungen:
-
A delta and c fibers in the trigeminal
nerve were confirmed
- electrophysiological responses to noxious stimuli
Anmerkungen:
- mechanical
pressure and thermal stimuli – nociceptors were identified and classified
similar to the way that nociceptors are classified in mammals
- Behavioural responses
Anmerkungen:
-
motivation to feed after application of
acetic acid to the lips of trout – using motivational state as a measure of the
animal’s affective state or mood -
- Birds
- Hermit crabs
- Response to noxious stimuli
Anmerkungen:
-
Hermit crabs will leave their shell when an electric
shock is given to the belly inside the shell – when it is sufficiently severe.
-
Only crabs that were shocked evacuated their shell –
indicating the aversive nature of the stimulus . Fewer crabs evacuated from a
preferred species of shell indicating a motivational trade off –
-
Most crabs that were shocked were more likely to
approach a new shell when offered - / approached it more quickly and made less
investigative attempts
- Can experience pain
Anmerkungen:
- Modulation by other higher brain centres
- Techniques
- Anatomical
Anmerkungen:
- shows whether difference brain centres that are associated with pain are connected
study projections
- LIMITATIONS
- indirect pathways?
- function can't be inverstigated
- Functional studies
Anmerkungen:
-
identify
cortical areas that receive information from the spinothalamic tract – functional properties that are known to be distinct
for primary nociceptive afferents– e.g high threshold intensity encoding in the nociceptive range,
sensitization following injury as a correlate of primary hyperalgesia.
- noxious stimuli
Anmerkungen:
- Response of structures to noxious stimuli
- direct or indirect connectivity?
Anmerkungen:
-
1.functional criteria that are independent of whether
connections are direct or indirect
- Electrophysiological
Anmerkungen:
-
1.single cell electrophysiological recording from cortical
structures & study of coding properties
- Voltage changes
Anmerkungen:
- Measure voltage changes generated mainly by synchronized
post-synaptic activity occurring in cortical pyramidal cells
Parallel arrangement of the pyramidal cells allows
summation of current flow generated by EPSPs and IPSPs: voltage changes are measurable at the scalp surface
- Imaging
- EEG
- Good temporal resolution
Anmerkungen:
- Good temporal resolution of cerebral activity related to a stimulus
- Originate?
Anmerkungen:
- Where do these electrical signals originate from?
- Poor spatial resolution
- Direct
Anmerkungen:
- direct measure of neural activity
- fMRI
- Indirect
- MEG
Anmerkungen:
- Allows improved source localisation of electrical activity of the brain in response to
noxious stimuli
- Direct
- PET
- Indirect