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Brain
Study Examines How People Feel Pain
Excerpt
By
Randolph E. Schmid,
AP
WASHINGTON - Pain that brings tears
to one person's eyes may be barely noticed by someone else, and
that can be a problem for doctors deciding on treatment.
The answer: Listen to the patient,
a new study says. Some people really do feel more pain than others.
"We have all met people who seem
very sensitive to pain as well as those who appear to tolerate
pain very well," said Robert C. Coghill of Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center.
"Until now, there was no objective
evidence that could confirm that these individual differences
in pain sensitivity are, in fact, real," said Coghill, lead investigator
on the paper published Monday in the online edition of Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study of brain activity showed
that some people respond more strongly to pain.
"One of the critical things is,
it provides physicians with the evidence they need to have confidence
in patients' reports of pain and use that to guide treatment,"
Coghill said.
The researchers used magnetic resonance
imaging to study the brains of 17 volunteers. The skin of each
volunteer's lower right leg was heated with a heating pad.
After each heating the participants
gave their estimate of how painful it was and the two sessions
were averaged. On a one-to-10 scale various individuals rated
the heating pain from a low of one to a high of "almost nine."
When the researchers compared the
brain scans to the pain ratings of the volunteers they found that
parts of the brain known to be involved in experiencing pain were
more active in people who said they felt more pain.
In particular, they found increased
activity in the primary somatosensory cortex, which deals with
pain location and intensity, and the anterior cingulate cortex,
which handles unpleasant feelings caused by pain.
But they found little difference
between people in the activity of the thalamus, which helps transmit
pain signals from the spinal cord to brain regions.
That may indicate that incoming
pain signals are being delivered by the spinal cord in a similar
way for different people, but once they arrive in the brain they
are handled differently.
Coghill said the study found no
difference in response to heat pain between men and women.
His paper comes six months after
researchers at the University of Michigan reported finding a gene
that can make people more or less sensitive to pain, depending
on the form they inherit.
In that study, brain scans showed
that painkilling chemicals called endorphins were much more active
in the brains of people who reported less sensitivity to pain.
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On the Net: http://www.pnas.org
Reference
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