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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 2 February 2001, pp. 951-959
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Neurology, 2Department of Physiology, and 4Division of Nuclear Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan; and 3Neurology Research Laboratories, Veteran's Affairs Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
Casey, Kenneth L.,
Thomas J. Morrow,
Jürgen Lorenz, and
Satoshi Minoshima.
Temporal and Spatial Dynamics of Human Forebrain Activity During
Heat Pain: Analysis by Positron Emission Tomography. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 951-959, 2001. To learn about
the sequence of brain activation patterns during heat pain, we acquired
positron emission tomographic (PET) brain scans at different times
during repetitive heat stimulation (40 or 50°C; 5-s contact) of each
subject's left forearm. Early scans began at the onset of
60 s of stimulation; late scans began after 40 s
of stimulation, which continued throughout the 60-s scan period (total
stimulus duration 100 s). Each subject (14 normal, right-handed
subjects; 10 male, 4 female; ages 18-42) used a visual analog scale to
rate the perceived stimulus intensity (0 = no heat, 7 = pain
threshold, 10 = barely tolerable pain) after each scan. The 40°C
stimulation received an average intensity rating of 2.19 ± 1.22 (mean ± SD) and the 50°C an average rating of 8.93 ± 1.33. During the scan sessions, subjects did not report a difference
between early and late scans. To examine the effect of the duration of
stimulation specifically, 8 of these subjects rated the perceived
intensity of each of 20 sequential 5-s duration contact heat stimuli
(40 or 50°C; 100 s of stimulation). We used a graphical method
to detect changes in perceived unpleasantness. There was no difference
in perceived intensity or unpleasantness during the 40°C stimulation.
However, during 50°C stimulation, perceived unpleasantness increased
and subjects perceived the last five, but not the second five, stimuli
as more intense than the first five stimuli. These psychophysical
changes could be mediated by brain structures with increasing activity
from early to late PET scans or that are active only during late scans.
These structures include the contralateral M1/S1 cortex, bilateral S2 and mid-insular cortex, contralateral VP thalamus, medial ipsilateral thalamus, and the vermis and paravermis of the cerebellum. Structures that are equally active throughout stimulation (contralateral mid-anterior cingulate and premotor cortex) are less likely to mediate
these psychophysical changes. Some cortical, but not subcortical, structures showed significant or borderline activation only during the
early scans (ipsilateral premotor cortex, contralateral perigenual anterior cingulate, lateral prefrontal, and anterior insular cortex); they may mediate pain-related attentive or anticipatory functions. Overall, the results reveal that 1) the pattern of brain
activation and the perception of heat pain both change during
repetitive noxious heat stimulation, 2) cortical activity
can be detected before subcortical responses appear, and 3)
timing the stimulation with respect to the scan period can, together
with psychophysical measurements, identify brain structures that are
likely to participate in the perception of pain.
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