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Journal of Neurophysiology

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Cortical Representation of the Sensory Dimension of Pain

Robert K. Hofbauer, Pierre Rainville, Gary H. Duncan, M. Catherine Bushnell
Journal of Neurophysiology Published 1 July 2001 Vol. 86 no. 1, 402-411 DOI:
Robert K. Hofbauer
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Pierre Rainville
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Gary H. Duncan
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M. Catherine Bushnell
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Abstract

It is well accepted that pain is a multidimensional experience, but little is known of how the brain represents these dimensions. We used positron emission tomography (PET) to indirectly measure pain-evoked cerebral activity before and after hypnotic suggestions were given to modulate the perceived intensity of a painful stimulus. These techniques were similar to those of a previous study in which we gave suggestions to modulate the perceived unpleasantness of a noxious stimulus. Ten volunteers were scanned while tonic warm and noxious heat stimuli were presented to the hand during four experimental conditions: alert control, hypnosis control, hypnotic suggestions for increased-pain intensity and hypnotic suggestions for decreased-pain intensity. As shown in previous brain imaging studies, noxious thermal stimuli presented during the alert and hypnosis-control conditions reliably activated contralateral structures, including primary somatosensory cortex (S1), secondary somatosensory cortex (S2), anterior cingulate cortex, and insular cortex. Hypnotic modulation of the intensity of the pain sensation led to significant changes in pain-evoked activity within S1 in contrast to our previous study in which specific modulation of pain unpleasantness (affect), independent of pain intensity, produced specific changes within the ACC. This double dissociation of cortical modulation indicates a relative specialization of the sensory and the classical limbic cortical areas in the processing of the sensory and affective dimensions of pain.

Footnotes

  • Present address and address for reprint requests: M. C. Bushnell, 3655 Promenade Sir William Osler, Rm. 1220, Anesthesia Research Unit, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1Y6, Canada (E-mail: bushnell{at}med.mcgill.ca).

  • Copyright © 2001 The American Physiological Society
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Cover: This composite image illustrates how we assessed the steady-state response of individual neurons in the visual wulst of the burrowing owl (top) as a function of contrast of drifting sine-wave gratings (bottom). Response profiles were typically monotonic but highly variable across cells. To capture a systematic trend in the data, we compared the performance of four plausible models (linear, power, logarithmic, and hyperbolic ratio) using classical goodness-of-fit measures and information theoretic model selection methods. The image of the burrowing owl is based on a photograph taken in our laboratory by, and used with permission from, João André da Costa Maia, and processed digitally by Rosângela Neuenschwander Maciel. From Vieira PG, Machado de Sousa JP, Baron J. Contrast response functions in the visual wulst of the alert burrowing owl: a single-unit study. J Neurophysiol; doi:10.1152/jn.00505.2015.

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Cortical Representation of the Sensory Dimension of Pain
Robert K. Hofbauer, Pierre Rainville, Gary H. Duncan, M. Catherine Bushnell
Journal of Neurophysiology Jul 2001, 86 (1) 402-411;

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Cortical Representation of the Sensory Dimension of Pain
Robert K. Hofbauer, Pierre Rainville, Gary H. Duncan, M. Catherine Bushnell
Journal of Neurophysiology Jul 2001, 86 (1) 402-411;
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