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Arthritis Pain Processed In Brain Areas
Concerned With Emotions And Fear
How does the brain process the experience of pain? Thanks to
advances in neuroimaging, we now know the answer lies in a network
of brain structures called the pain matrix. This matrix contains
two parallel systems. The medial pain system processes the emotional
aspects of pain, including fear and stress, while the lateral
system processes the physical sensations—pain's intensity, location,
and duration.
Marked by morning stiffness, joint aches, and flare-ups, the
pain of arthritis tends to be acute and recurrent, in contrast
to many chronic pain conditions. Arthritis pain therefore makes
an ideal model for comparing common clinical pain with experimental
pain. Inspired by this observation, researchers at University
of Manchester Rheumatic Diseases Centre in the United Kingdom
conducted the first study to compare directly the brain areas
involved in processing arthritis pain and experimental pain in
a group of patients with osteoarthritis (OA). Their results, published
in the April 2007 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism (http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis),
shed light on the role of emotions in how patients feel arthritis
pain.
The study focused on 12 patients with knee OA—6 women and 6 men,
with a mean age of 52 years. All subjects underwent positron emission
tomography (PET), to measure and map 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)
uptake in the brain as an indicator of brain activity. PET scans
were performed during three different pain conditions: arthritic
knee pain; experimental pain, achieved by heat application; and
pain-free. The brain responses to each pain state were then rigorously
examined and statistically evaluated and compared for significant
differences.
In all OA subjects, both pain conditions activated the entire
pain matrix. However, during arthritic pain, activity was increased
within the medial pain system of the brain, including most of
the cingulate cortex, the thalamus, and the amygdala. This suggests
that, for these patients, arthritis pain has more emotional impact—and
perhaps stronger associations with fear and distress—than experimental
pain. Arthritis pain also prompted heightened activation of the
prefrontal cortex and the inferior posterior parietal cortex,
areas of the brain instrumental in the supervision of attention.
Their activation while suffering arthritis pain may reflect the
patients' concentration on coping strategies.
"The present study demonstrates the importance of the medial
pain system during the experience of arthritic pain and suggests
that it is a likely target for both pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic
interventions," notes its leading author, Prof. A.K.P. Jones.
"Considering the recent concerns about the long-term safety of
cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors, we hope that our current findings
will stimulate partnerships between academia and the pharmacological
industry to develop a new class of analgesics for arthritic pain
that specifically target the medial pain system."
As Prof. Jones acknowledges, the study's main limitation is its
small number of subjects. Larger studies of the relationship between
arthritis pain and the medial pain system are critical, particularly
for exploring the effect of variables from depression and anxiety
to guided imagery, meditation, and other mind-based pain management
techniques. "Researchers should be moving toward more naturalistic
studies in patients," Prof. Jones suggests, "in order to fully
understand the perception of different types of clinical pain."
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