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1.
J Neurosci ; 44(17)2024 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38453467

ABSTRACT

Pain perception arises from the integration of prior expectations with sensory information. Although recent work has demonstrated that treatment expectancy effects (e.g., placebo hypoalgesia) can be explained by a Bayesian integration framework incorporating the precision level of expectations and sensory inputs, the key factor modulating this integration in stimulus expectancy-induced pain modulation remains unclear. In a stimulus expectancy paradigm combining emotion regulation in healthy male and female adults, we found that participants' voluntary reduction in anticipatory anxiety and pleasantness monotonically reduced the magnitude of pain modulation by negative and positive expectations, respectively, indicating a role of emotion. For both types of expectations, Bayesian model comparisons confirmed that an integration model using the respective emotion of expectations and sensory inputs explained stimulus expectancy effects on pain better than using their respective precision. For negative expectations, the role of anxiety is further supported by our fMRI findings that (1) functional coupling within anxiety-processing brain regions (amygdala and anterior cingulate) reflected the integration of expectations with sensory inputs and (2) anxiety appeared to impair the updating of expectations via suppressed prediction error signals in the anterior cingulate, thus perpetuating negative expectancy effects. Regarding positive expectations, their integration with sensory inputs relied on the functional coupling within brain structures processing positive emotion and inhibiting threat responding (medial orbitofrontal cortex and hippocampus). In summary, different from treatment expectancy, pain modulation by stimulus expectancy emanates from emotion-modulated integration of beliefs with sensory evidence and inadequate belief updating.


Subject(s)
Anticipation, Psychological , Anxiety , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Humans , Male , Female , Anxiety/psychology , Anxiety/physiopathology , Adult , Anticipation, Psychological/physiology , Young Adult , Pain Perception/physiology , Pain/psychology , Pain/physiopathology , Bayes Theorem , Emotions/physiology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/physiopathology , Brain/physiology , Pleasure/physiology , Brain Mapping
2.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 107(3): e1167-e1180, 2022 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34665863

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: About one-third of diabetic patients suffer from neuropathic pain, which is poorly responsive to analgesic therapy and associated with greater autonomic dysfunction. Previous research on diabetic neuropathy mainly links pain and autonomic dysfunction to peripheral nerve degeneration resulting from systemic metabolic disturbances, but maladaptive plasticity in the central pain and autonomic systems following peripheral nerve injury has been relatively ignored. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate how the brain is affected in painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN), in terms of altered structural connectivity (SC) of the thalamus and hypothalamus that are key regions modulating nociceptive and autonomic responses. METHODS: We recruited 25 PDN and 13 painless (PLDN) diabetic neuropathy patients, and 27 healthy adults as controls. The SC of the thalamus and hypothalamus with limbic regions mediating nociceptive and autonomic responses was assessed using diffusion tractography. RESULTS: The PDN patients had significantly lower thalamic and hypothalamic SC of the right amygdala compared with the PLDN and control groups. In addition, lower thalamic SC of the insula was associated with more severe peripheral nerve degeneration, and lower hypothalamic SC of the anterior cingulate cortex was associated with greater autonomic dysfunction manifested by decreased heart rate variability. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that alterations in brain structural connectivity could be a form of maladaptive plasticity after peripheral nerve injury, and also demonstrate a pathophysiological association between disconnection of the limbic circuitry and pain and autonomic dysfunction in diabetes.


Subject(s)
Diabetic Neuropathies/physiopathology , Hypothalamus/physiopathology , Neuralgia/physiopathology , Primary Dysautonomias/physiopathology , Thalamus/physiopathology , Adaptation, Physiological , Adult , Aged , Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Connectome , Diffusion Tensor Imaging , Female , Humans , Hypothalamus/diagnostic imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Thalamus/diagnostic imaging
3.
Cereb Cortex ; 32(7): 1480-1493, 2022 03 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34427294

ABSTRACT

While detecting somatic stimuli from the external environment, an accurate determination of their spatial and temporal properties is essential for human behavior. Whether and how detection relates to human capacity for somatosensory spatial discrimination (SD) and temporal discrimination (TD) remains unclear. Here, participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning when simply detecting vibrotactile stimuli of the leg, judging their location (SD), or deciding their number in time (TD). By conceptualizing tactile discrimination as consisting of detection and determination processes, we found that tactile detection elicited activation specifically involved in SD within the right inferior and superior parietal lobules, 2 regions previously implicated in the control of spatial attention. These 2 regions remained activated in the determination process, during which functional connectivity between these 2 regions predicted individual SD ability. In contrast, tactile detection produced little activation specifically related to TD. Participants' TD ability was implemented in brain regions implicated in coding temporal structures of somatic stimuli (primary somatosensory cortex) and time estimation (anterior cingulate, pre-supplementary motor area, and putamen). Together, our findings indicate a close link between somatosensory detection and SD (but not TD) at the neural level, which aids in explaining why we can promptly respond toward detected somatic stimuli.


Subject(s)
Motor Cortex , Spatial Navigation , Gyrus Cinguli , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Parietal Lobe , Putamen , Somatosensory Cortex/diagnostic imaging
4.
Pain ; 162(5): 1387-1399, 2021 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33239524

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Small-fiber neuropathy (SFN) has been traditionally considered as a pure disorder of the peripheral nervous system, characterized by neuropathic pain and degeneration of small-diameter nerve fibers in the skin. Previous functional magnetic resonance imaging studies revealed abnormal activations of pain networks, but the structural basis underlying such maladaptive functional alterations remains elusive. We applied diffusion tensor imaging to explore the influences of SFN on brain microstructures. Forty-one patients with pathology-proven SFN with reduced skin innervation were recruited. White matter connectivity with the thalamus as the seed was assessed using probabilistic tractography of diffusion tensor imaging. Patients with SFN had reduced thalamic connectivity with the insular cortex and the sensorimotor areas, including the postcentral and precentral gyri. Furthermore, the degree of skin nerve degeneration, measured by intraepidermal nerve fiber density, was associated with the reduction of connectivity between the thalamus and pain-related areas according to different neuropathic pain phenotypes, specifically, the frontal, cingulate, motor, and limbic areas for burning, electrical shocks, tingling, mechanical allodynia, and numbness. Despite altered white matter connectivity, there was no change in white matter integrity assessed with fractional anisotropy. Our findings indicate that alterations in structural connectivity may serve as a biomarker of maladaptive brain plasticity that contributes to neuropathic pain after peripheral nerve degeneration.


Subject(s)
Connectome , Neuralgia , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Diffusion Tensor Imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Nerve Degeneration , Neuralgia/diagnostic imaging , Phenotype , Thalamus/diagnostic imaging
5.
J Neurosci ; 39(7): 1261-1274, 2019 02 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30552181

ABSTRACT

Expectations substantially influence pain perception, but the relationship between positive and negative expectations remains unclear. Recent evidence indicates that the integration between pain-related expectations and prediction errors is crucial for pain perception, which suggests that aversive prediction error-associated regions, such as the anterior insular cortex (aIC) and rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC), may play a pivotal role in expectation-induced pain modulation and help to delineate the relationship between positive and negative expectations. In a stimulus expectancy paradigm combining fMRI in healthy volunteers of both sexes, we found that, although positive and negative expectations respectively engaged the right aIC and right rACC to modulate pain, their associated activations and pain rating changes were significantly correlated. When positive and negative expectations modulated pain, the right aIC and rACC exhibited opposite coupling with periaqueductal gray (PAG) and the mismatch between actual and expected pain respectively modulated their coupling with PAG and thalamus across individuals. Participants' certainty about expectations predicted the extent of pain modulation, with positive expectations involving connectivity between aIC and hippocampus, a region regulating anxiety, and negative expectations engaging connectivity between rACC and lateral orbitofrontal cortex, a region reflecting outcome value and certainty. Interestingly, the strength of these certainty-related connectivities was also significantly associated between positive and negative expectations. These findings suggest that aversive prediction-error-related regions interact with pain-processing circuits to underlie stimulus expectancy effects on pain, with positive and negative expectations engaging dissociable but interrelated neural responses that are dependently regulated by individual certainty about expectations.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Positive and negative expectations substantially influence pain perception, but their relationship remains unclear. Using fMRI in a stimulus expectancy paradigm, we found that, although positive and negative expectations engaged separate brain regions encoding the mismatch between actual and expected pain and involved opposite functional connectivities with the descending pain modulatory system, they produced significantly correlated pain rating changes and brain activation. Moreover, participants' certainty about expectations predicted the magnitude of both types of pain modulation, with the underlying functional connectivities significantly correlated between positive and negative expectations. These findings advance current understanding about cognitive modulation of pain, suggesting that both types of pain modulation engage different aversive prediction error signals but are dependently regulated by individual certainty about expectations.


Subject(s)
Anticipation, Psychological , Brain/physiopathology , Pain Perception , Adult , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain Mapping , Cues , Female , Gyrus Cinguli/diagnostic imaging , Hippocampus/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Pain/diagnostic imaging , Pain/physiopathology , Pain/psychology , Pain Measurement , Periaqueductal Gray/diagnostic imaging , Prefrontal Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Thalamus/diagnostic imaging , Young Adult
6.
Pain ; 159(2): 359-370, 2018 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29076920

ABSTRACT

Humans require the ability to discriminate intensities of noxious stimuli to avoid future harm. This discrimination process seems to be biased by an individual's attention to pain and involves modulation of the relative intensity differences between stimuli (ie, Weber fraction). Here, we ask whether attention networks in the brain modulate the discrimination process and investigate the neural correlates reflecting the Weber fraction for pain intensity. In a delayed discrimination task, participants differentiated the intensity of 2 sequentially applied stimuli after a delay interval. Compared with nonpain discrimination, pain discrimination performance was modulated by participants' vigilance to pain, which was reflected by the functional connectivity between the left inferior parietal lobule and the right thalamus. Of note, this vigilance-related functional coupling specifically predicted participants' behavioral ability to differentiate pain intensities. Moreover, unique to pain discrimination tasks, the response in the right superior frontal gyrus linearly represented the Weber fraction for pain intensity, which significantly biased participants' pain discriminability. These findings suggest that pain intensity discrimination in humans relies on vigilance-related enhancement in the parieto-thalamic attention network, thereby allowing the prefrontal cortex to estimate the relative intensity differences between noxious stimuli.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/etiology , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Pain Measurement/psychology , Pain/complications , Pain/psychology , Adult , Awareness , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Electric Stimulation/adverse effects , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Oxygen/blood , Pain/diagnostic imaging , Pain/etiology , Physical Stimulation/adverse effects , Psychophysics , Psychophysiology , Skin/innervation , Young Adult
7.
J Neurosci ; 37(49): 11806-11817, 2017 12 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29097595

ABSTRACT

To convert a painful stimulus into a briefly maintainable construct when the painful stimulus is no longer accessible is essential to guide human behavior and avoid dangerous situations. Because of the aversive nature of pain, this encoding process might be influenced by emotional aspects and could thus vary across individuals, but we have yet to understand both the basic underlying neural mechanisms as well as potential interindividual differences. Using fMRI in combination with a delayed-discrimination task in healthy volunteers of both sexes, we discovered that brain regions involved in this working memory encoding process were dissociable according to whether the to-be-remembered stimulus was painful or not, with the medial thalamus and the rostral anterior cingulate cortex encoding painful and the primary somatosensory cortex encoding nonpainful stimuli. Encoding of painful stimuli furthermore significantly enhanced functional connectivity between the thalamus and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). With regards to emotional aspects influencing encoding processes, we observed that more anxious participants showed significant performance advantages when encoding painful stimuli. Importantly, only during the encoding of pain, the interindividual differences in anxiety were associated with the strength of coupling between medial thalamus and mPFC, which was furthermore related to activity in the amygdala. These results indicate not only that there is a distinct signature for the encoding of a painful experience in humans, but also that this encoding process involves a strong affective component.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT To convert the sensation of pain into a briefly maintainable construct is essential to guide human behavior and avoid dangerous situations. Although this working memory encoding process is implicitly contained in the majority of studies, the underlying neural mechanisms remain unclear. Using fMRI in a delayed-discrimination task, we found that the encoding of pain engaged the activation of the medial thalamus and the functional connectivity between the thalamus and medial prefrontal cortex. These fMRI data were directly and indirectly related to participants' self-reported trait and state anxiety. Our findings indicate that the mechanisms responsible for the encoding of noxious stimuli differ from those for the encoding of innocuous stimuli, and that these mechanisms are shaped by an individual's anxiety levels.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/diagnostic imaging , Mediodorsal Thalamic Nucleus/diagnostic imaging , Memory , Pain Measurement/methods , Pain/diagnostic imaging , Prefrontal Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Anxiety/psychology , Female , Hot Temperature/adverse effects , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Mediodorsal Thalamic Nucleus/physiology , Memory/physiology , Pain/psychology , Physical Stimulation/adverse effects , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Random Allocation , Young Adult
8.
J Formos Med Assoc ; 116(8): 571-581, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28532582

ABSTRACT

Pain is a common non-motor symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD) that markedly impacts patients' quality of life. Although pain occurs mostly secondary to motor disability of PD, pain may antedate motor symptoms by years. Numerous studies have shown that PD patients manifest altered sensory and pain thresholds compared with control subjects. Although both levodopa and deep brain stimulation improve motor symptoms, there remains no direct correlation between motor improvement and altered pain sensitivity, suggesting that motor symptoms and pain do not necessarily share pathogenetic mechanisms. Whether nociceptive processing is dysfunctional in the early stages of PD, when motor symptoms are not prominent, remains uncertain. In this review, we highlight the evidence for disrupted nociceptive processing in patients with early-stage PD. Painful symptoms and aberrant pain processing in early PD are associated with both central and peripheral deafferentation. Dopamine depletion in selective striatal regions, and the development of Lewy pathology in specific non-dopaminergic subcortical areas, underlie the clinical features of pain at this early disease stage. An increased awareness of pain as an early feature of PD might provide further insights into a mechanism-based approach to sensory system dysregulation in this disease.


Subject(s)
Pain/physiopathology , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Depression/physiopathology , Humans , Pain/drug therapy , Pain/etiology , Pain Measurement , Pain Perception
9.
Pain ; 158(3): 516-525, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28129214

ABSTRACT

Contact heat-evoked potentials (CHEPs) have become an established method of assessing small-fiber sensory nerves; however, their potential as a physiological signature of neuropathic pain symptoms has not been fully explored. To investigate the diagnostic efficacy in examining small-fiber sensory nerve degeneration, the relationship with skin innervations, and clinical correlates with sensory symptoms, we recruited 188 patients (115 men) with length-dependent sensory symptoms and reduced intraepidermal nerve fiber (IENF) density at the distal leg to perform CHEP, quantitative sensory testing, and nerve conduction study. Fifty-seven age- and sex-matched controls were enrolled for comparison of CHEP and skin innervation. Among patients with neuropathy, 144 patients had neuropathic pain and 64 cases had evoked pain. Compared with quantitative sensory testing and nerve conduction study parameters, CHEP amplitudes showed the highest sensitivity for diagnosing small-fiber sensory nerve degeneration and exhibited the strongest correlation with IENF density in multiple linear regression. Contact heat-evoked potential amplitudes were strongly correlated with the degree of skin innervation in both patients with neuropathy and controls, and the slope of the regression line between CHEP amplitude and IENF density was higher in patients with neuropathy than in controls. Patients with evoked pain had higher CHEP amplitude than those without evoked pain, independent of IENF density. Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed that CHEP had better performance in diagnosing small-fiber sensory nerve degeneration than thermal thresholds. Furthermore, CHEPs showed superior classification accuracy with respect to evoked pain. In conclusion, CHEP is a sensitive tool to evaluate pathophysiology of small-fiber sensory nerve and serves as a physiological signature of neuropathic pain symptoms.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory/physiology , Hot Temperature , Nerve Degeneration/complications , Neuralgia/pathology , Neuralgia/physiopathology , Skin/innervation , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Biomarkers , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Nerve Fibers , Neural Conduction/physiology , Neuralgia/etiology , Physical Stimulation , ROC Curve , Taiwan , Young Adult
10.
Neuroimage ; 122: 288-97, 2015 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26279210

ABSTRACT

Although the small-diameter primary afferent fibers in the skin promptly respond to nociceptive stimuli and convey sensory inputs to the central nervous system, the neural signatures that underpin the relationship between cutaneous afferent fibers and pain perception remain elusive. We combined skin biopsy at the lateral aspect of the distal leg, which is used to quantify cutaneous afferent fibers, with fMRI, which is used to assess brain responses and functional connectivity, to investigate the relationship between cutaneous sensory nerves and the corresponding pain perception in the brain after applying heat pain stimulation to the dorsum of the right foot in healthy subjects. During painful stimulation, the degree of cutaneous innervation, as measured by epidermal nerve fiber density, was correlated with individual blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals of the posterior insular cortex and of the thalamus, periaqueductal gray, and rostral ventromedial medulla. Pain perception was associated with the activation of the anterior insular cortex and with the functional connectivity from the anterior insular cortex to the primary somatosensory cortex during painful stimulation. Most importantly, both epidermal nerve fiber density and activity in the posterior insular cortex showed a positive correlation with the strength of coupling under pain between the anterior insular cortex and the primary somatosensory cortex. Thus, our findings support the notion that the neural circuitry subserving pain perception interacts with the cerebral correlates of peripheral nociceptive fibers, which implicates an indirect role for skin nerves in human pain perception.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Epidermis/innervation , Nociception/physiology , Nociceptors/cytology , Adult , Aged , Brain Mapping , Female , Hot Temperature , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Physical Stimulation
11.
Pain ; 156(5): 904-916, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25734991

ABSTRACT

Small-fiber neuropathy (SFN) is hallmarked by degeneration of small unmyelinated peripheral nerve fibers in the skin. Traditionally, it has been considered as a pure disorder of the peripheral nervous system. Nevertheless, previous work found that dysfunction of skin nerves led to abnormal recruitment of pain-related regions, suggesting that the brain may be affected in SFN. This report combined structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify structural and functional changes in the brain of 19 patients with SFN compared with 17 healthy controls. We applied tensor-based morphometry to detect brain structural alterations in SFN. Greater volume reduction in pain-processing regions, particularly the bilateral anterior cingulate cortices (ACCs), was associated with greater depletion of intraepidermal nerve fibers, a pathological biomarker of skin nerve degeneration. Based on the hypothesis that structural alterations in the pain-processing regions might impair their functional connectivity, we further applied psychophysiological interaction analysis to assess functional connectivity of the ACCs during noxious heat stimulation. There was significant reduction in functional connectivity from the ACCs to the limbic areas (the parahippocampal gyrus and the posterior cingulate cortex), pain-processing area (the insula), and visuospatial areas (the cuneus). Moreover, the degree of reduction in functional connectivity for the ACC to the amygdala and the precuneus was linearly correlated with the severity of intraepidermal nerve fiber depletion. Our findings suggest that SFN is not a pure peripheral nervous system disorder. The pain-related brain networks tend to break into functionally independent components, with severity linked to the degree of skin nerve degeneration.


Subject(s)
Limbic System/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Nerve Degeneration/pathology , Nerve Fibers/pathology , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Pain/pathology , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Diagnostic Imaging , Female , Gyrus Cinguli/pathology , Gyrus Cinguli/physiopathology , Humans , Limbic System/pathology , Male , Middle Aged , Nerve Degeneration/complications , Nerve Degeneration/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/pathology , Pain/physiopathology , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/pathology , Skin/innervation
12.
Expert Rev Neurother ; 15(3): 305-13, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25664678

ABSTRACT

Small fiber neuropathy is a syndrome of diverse disease etiology because of multiple pathophysiologic mechanisms with major presentations of neuropathic pain and autonomic symptoms. Over the past decade, there has been substantial progress in the treatments for neuropathic pain, dysautonomia and disease-modifying strategy. In particular, anticonvulsants and antidepressants alleviate neuropathic pain based on randomized clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Analgesics/therapeutic use , Anticonvulsants/therapeutic use , Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Erythromelalgia/drug therapy , Neuralgia/drug therapy , Primary Dysautonomias/drug therapy , Erythromelalgia/complications , Erythromelalgia/pathology , Humans , Neuralgia/etiology , Neuralgia/pathology , Primary Dysautonomias/etiology , Primary Dysautonomias/pathology
13.
Pain ; 154(10): 2120-2129, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23811039

ABSTRACT

The perception of pain changes as people age. However, how aging affects the quality of pain and whether specific pain-processing brain regions mediate this effect is unclear. We hypothesized that specific structures in the cerebral nociceptive system mediate the effect of aging on the variation in different pain psychophysical measures. We examined the relationships between painful heat stimulation to the foot and both functional magnetic resonance imaging signals and gray matter volume in 23 healthy subjects (aged 25∼71 years). Increased age was related to decreased subjective ratings of overall pain intensity and the "sharp" quality of pain. Group activation maps of multiple linear regression analyses revealed that age predicted responses in the middle insular cortex (IC) and primary somatosensory cortex (S1) to pain stimuli after controlling for their gray matter volumes. Blood oxygenation level-dependent signals in the contralateral middle IC and S1 were related to ratings of "sharpness," but not any affective descriptors of pain. Importantly, activity in the contralateral middle IC specifically mediated the effect of age on overall pain perception, whereas activity in the contralateral S1 mediated the relationship between age and sharp sensation to pain. The analyses of gray matter volume revealed that key nociceptive cerebral regions did not undergo significant age-related gray matter loss. However, the volume of the cingulate cortex covaried with pain perception after adjusting for corresponding neural activity to pain. These results suggest that age-related functional alterations in pain-processing regions are responsible for changes in pain perception during normal aging.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Brain Mapping/methods , Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology , Hot Temperature/adverse effects , Pain/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Aging/psychology , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Pain/psychology
14.
Hum Brain Mapp ; 34(10): 2733-46, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22522975

ABSTRACT

Persistent neuropathic pain due to peripheral nerve degeneration in diabetes is a stressful symptom; however, the underlying neural substrates remain elusive. This study attempted to explore neuroanatomical substrates of thermal hyperalgesia and burning pain in a diabetic cohort due to pathologically proven cutaneous nerve degeneration (the painful group). By applying noxious 44°C heat stimuli to the right foot to provoke neuropathic pain symptoms, brain activation patterns were compared with those of healthy control subjects and patients with a similar degree of cutaneous nerve degeneration but without pain (the painless group). Psychophysical results showed enhanced affective pain ratings in the painful group. After eliminating the influence of different pain intensity ratings on cerebral responses, the painful group displayed augmented responses in the limbic and striatal structures, including the perigenual anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), superior frontal gyrus, medial thalamus, anterior insular cortex, lentiform nucleus (LN), and premotor area. Among these regions, blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals in the ACC and LN were correlated with pain ratings to thermal stimulations in the painful group. Furthermore, activation maps of a simple regression analysis as well as a region of interest analysis revealed that responses in these limbic and striatal circuits paralleled the duration of neuropathic pain. However, in the painless group, BOLD signals in the primary somatosensory cortex and ACC were reduced. These results suggest that enhanced limbic and striatal activations underlie maladaptive responses after cutaneous nerve degeneration, which contributed to the development and maintenance of burning pain and thermal hyperalgesia in diabetes.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Corpus Striatum/physiopathology , Diabetic Neuropathies/pathology , Limbic System/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Nerve Degeneration/pathology , Neuralgia/pathology , Pain Perception/physiology , Adult , Aged , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/physiopathology , Diabetic Neuropathies/physiopathology , Epidermis/innervation , Female , Gyrus Cinguli/physiopathology , Hot Temperature/adverse effects , Humans , Hyperalgesia/etiology , Hyperalgesia/physiopathology , Hypesthesia/etiology , Hypesthesia/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Nerve Degeneration/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Neuralgia/etiology , Neuralgia/physiopathology , Nociception/physiology , Nociceptive Pain/etiology , Nociceptive Pain/physiopathology , Pain/etiology , Pain/physiopathology , Paresthesia/etiology , Paresthesia/physiopathology , Peripheral Nerves/pathology
15.
Arch Neurol ; 68(2): 200-6, 2011 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21320986

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the skin innervation and its clinical significance in late-stage chronic kidney disease (CKD). DESIGN: Case series. SETTING: National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan. PATIENTS: Forty consecutive nondiabetic patients with late-stage CKD (14 female and 26 male; mean [SD] age, 60.7 [12.3] years), including 2 cases with stage 3 CKD, 6 with stage 4 CKD, and 32 with stage 5 CKD, ie, end-stage kidney disease. INTERVENTIONS: Clinical evaluation of neurological deficits, nerve conduction study, autonomic function tests, and a 3-mm-diameter skin biopsy specimen taken from the distal leg. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Quantitation of epidermal innervation, parameters of nerve conduction study, R-R interval variability, and sympathetic skin response. RESULTS: Clinically, 21 patients (52.5%) were symptomatic with paresthesia over the limbs or autonomic symptoms. The intraepidermal nerve fiber (IENF) density was markedly reduced in patients with CKD compared with age- and sex-matched controls (mean [SD], 2.8 [2.0] vs 8.6 [2.8] fibers/mm; P < .001). Skin denervation was observed in 27 patients (67.5%). Fifteen patients (37.5%) had abnormalities on nerve conduction studies, and 29 patients (72.5%) had abnormal results on autonomic function tests. By analysis with multiple regression models, the IENF density was negatively correlated with the duration of renal disease (P = .02). Additionally, the R-R interval variability at rest was linearly correlated with the IENF density (P = .02) and the absence of sympathetic skin responses at the soles was associated with reduced IENF density (P = .03). CONCLUSIONS: Small-fiber sensory and autonomic neuropathies constitute the major form of neuropathy in late-stage CKD. Furthermore, skin denervation was associated with the duration of renal disease.


Subject(s)
Kidney Failure, Chronic/complications , Kidney Failure, Chronic/physiopathology , Nerve Fibers/pathology , Neural Conduction , Paresthesia/epidemiology , Paresthesia/physiopathology , Skin/innervation , Aged , Autonomic Pathways/pathology , Autonomic Pathways/physiopathology , Biopsy , Case-Control Studies , Disease Progression , Extremities/innervation , Extremities/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Kidney Failure, Chronic/pathology , Male , Middle Aged , Paresthesia/etiology , Paresthesia/pathology , Regression Analysis , Severity of Illness Index , Skin/pathology , Skin/physiopathology , Taiwan/epidemiology
16.
Diabetes Care ; 33(12): 2654-9, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20841612

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Neuropathic pain due to small-fiber sensory neuropathy in type 2 diabetes can be diagnosed by skin biopsy with quantification of intra-epidermal nerve fiber (IENF) density. There is, however, a lack of noninvasive physiological assessment. Contact heat-evoked potential (CHEP) is a newly developed approach to record cerebral responses of Aδ fiber-mediated thermonociceptive stimuli. We investigated the diagnostic role of CHEP. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: From 2006 to 2009, there were 32 type 2 diabetic patients (20 males and 12 females, aged 51.63 ± 10.93 years) with skin denervation and neuropathic pain. CHEPs were recorded with heat stimulations at the distal leg, where skin biopsy was performed. RESULTS: CHEP amplitude was reduced in patients compared with age- and sex-matched control subjects (14.8 ± 15.6 vs. 33.7 ± 10.1 µV, P < 0.001). Abnormal CHEP patterns (reduced amplitude or prolonged latency) were noted in 81.3% of these patients. The CHEP amplitude was the most significant parameter correlated with IENF density (P = 0.003) and pain perception to contact heat stimuli (P = 0.019) on multiple linear regression models. An excitability index was derived by calculating the ratio of the CHEP amplitude over the IENF density. This excitability index was higher in diabetic patients than in control subjects (P = 0.023), indicating enhanced brain activities in neuropathic pain. Among different neuropathic pain symptoms, the subgroup with evoked pain had higher CHEP amplitudes than the subgroup without evoked pain (P = 0.011). CONCLUSIONS: CHEP offers a noninvasive approach to evaluate the degeneration of thermonociceptive nerves in diabetic neuropathy by providing physiological correlates of skin denervation and neuropathic pain.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/physiopathology , Diabetic Neuropathies/physiopathology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Hot Temperature , Neuralgia/physiopathology , Skin/innervation , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
17.
Hum Brain Mapp ; 31(5): 743-57, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19823988

ABSTRACT

Whether innocuous heat (IH)-exclusive brain regions exist and whether patterns of cerebral responses to IH and noxious heat (NH) stimulations are similar remain elusive. We hypothesized that distinct and shared cerebral networks were evoked by each type of stimulus. Twelve normal subjects participated in a functional MRI study with rapidly ramped IH (38 degrees C) and NH (44 degrees C) applied to the foot. Group activation maps demonstrated three patterns of cerebral activation: (1) IH-responsive only in the inferior parietal lobule (IPL); (2) NH-responsive only in the primary somatosensory cortex (S1), secondary somatosensory cortex (S2), posterior insular cortex (IC), and premotor area (PMA); and (3) both IH- and NH-responsive in the middle frontal gyrus, inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), anterior IC, cerebellum, superior frontal gyrus, supplementary motor area, thalamus, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), lentiform nucleus (LN), and midbrain. According to the temporal analysis of regions of interest, the IPL exclusively responded to IH, and the S2, posterior IC, and PMA were exclusively activated by NH throughout the entire period of stimulation. The IFG, thalamus, ACC, and LN responded differently during different phases of IH versus NH stimulation, and the NH-responsive-only S1 responded transiently during the early phase of IH stimulation. BOLD signals in bilateral IPLs were specifically correlated with the ratings of IH sensation, while responses in the contralateral S1 and S2 were correlated with pain intensity. These results suggest that distinct and shared spatial and temporal patterns of cerebral networks are responsible for the perception of IH and NH.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Pain/physiopathology , Thermosensing/physiology , Adult , Aged , Brain/blood supply , Brain Mapping , Cerebrovascular Circulation/physiology , Female , Foot/physiopathology , Hot Temperature , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Oxygen/blood , Pain Measurement , Physical Stimulation , Psychophysics , Time Factors
18.
Clin Neurophysiol ; 119(3): 653-661, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18164654

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Contact heat evoked potentials (CHEPs) provide an objective approach to investigate cerebral responses to thermal stimuli mediated by Adelta fibers. Skin denervation is often associated with reduced thermal sensibilities. We aimed to investigate the influences of skin denervation on CHEPs in neuropathic patients. METHODS: CHEPs were recorded at the vertex area by applying contact heat stimuli of 51 degrees C on the distal leg of neuropathic patients with sensory symptoms and pathological evidence of skin denervation in the distal leg. Patterns and parameters of CHEPs in the neuropathic group were compared with those in the control group of age- and gender-matched subjects. RESULTS: There were 25 neuropathic patients with reduced intraepidermal fiber (IENF) density (1.46+/-1.70fibers/mm, range: 0-5.32). In the control group, well-defined averaged tracings of CHEPs with an initial negative peak (N-wave) followed by a positive peak (P-wave) were consistently recorded in all 25 subjects. The peripheral conduction velocities of CHEPs were 9.92+/-4.06m/s (range: 6.06-16.60), in the range of Adelta fibers. The group of neuropathic patients had markedly reduced N-P amplitudes (p<0.0001) and prolonged N-wave latencies (p=0.049) compared to the control group. IENF density was the only neuropathic parameter correlated with N-P amplitude on multiple linear regression analysis (p=0.010) compared to large-fiber parameters. CONCLUSIONS: In neuropathic patients with pathological evidence of skin denervation, there were reduced amplitude and prolonged latencies in CHEPs mediated by Adelta fibers. The reduction of CHEP amplitude corresponded to the degree of skin denervation. SIGNIFICANCE: CHEP offers electrophysiological evidence of thermal responses and provides an objective, non-invasive approach to assess the physiological counterparts of skin denervation in neuropathic patients.


Subject(s)
Epidermis/innervation , Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory/physiology , Hot Temperature , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/pathology , Adult , Aged , Electric Stimulation/methods , Electromyography/methods , Epidermis/metabolism , Epidermis/pathology , Epidermis/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neural Conduction/physiology , Neural Conduction/radiation effects , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases/physiopathology , Reaction Time/physiology , Retrospective Studies , Ubiquitin Thiolesterase/metabolism
19.
Muscle Nerve ; 36(1): 30-8, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17503497

ABSTRACT

Age significantly influences the detection thresholds to noxious heat; such thresholds depend on responses in the cerebral cortex to thermal stimuli and the psychophysical perception of such responses. To understand the influence of age on cerebral responses, we used contact heat-evoked potentials (CHEPs) to investigate the physiology of cerebral responses to thermal stimuli in 70 healthy subjects (33 men and 37 women, 39.56 +/- 12.12 years of age). With heat stimulation of fixed intensity (51 degrees C) on the distal forearm and distal leg, CHEPs revealed consistent waveforms with an initial negative peak (N1 latency: 398.63 +/- 28.55 and 449.03 +/- 32.21 ms for upper and lower limbs) and a later positive peak (P1 latency: 541.63 +/- 37.92 and 595.41 +/- 39.24 ms for upper and lower limbs) with N1-P1 interpeak amplitude of 42.30 +/- 12.57 microV in the upper limb and 39.67 +/- 12.03 microV in the lower limb. On analyses with models of multiple linear regression, N1-P1 amplitudes were negatively correlated with age and N1 latencies were correlated with gender, with females having shorter latencies. The verbal rating scale (VRS) for pain perception was higher in females than males, and decreased with aging. In addition, VRS paralleled changes in N1-P1 amplitude and N1 latency; the higher the VRS, the shorter the N1 latency and the higher the N1-P1 amplitude. These results provide evidence that CHEPs are influenced significantly by aging, corresponding to aging-related changes in thermal pain perception.


Subject(s)
Aging/physiology , Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory/physiology , Hot Temperature , Sensory Thresholds/physiology , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Electroencephalography/methods , Extremities/innervation , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Physical Stimulation/methods , Psychophysics/methods , Reaction Time , Sex Factors
20.
Brain ; 129(Pt 4): 977-85, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16415307

ABSTRACT

To understand the clinical significance and mechanisms of cutaneous denervation in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), we assessed intraepidermal nerve fibre (IENF) density of the distal leg in 45 SLE patients (4 males and 41 females, aged 38.4 +/- 13.6 years) and analysed its correlations with pathology, lupus activity, sensory thresholds and electrophysiological parameters. Compared with age- and gender-matched control subjects, SLE patients had lower IENF densities (3.08 +/- 2.17 versus 11.27 +/- 3.96 fibres/mm, P < 0.0001); IENF densities were reduced in 38 patients (82.2%). Pathologically, 11 patients (24.4%) were found to have definite cutaneous vasculitis; the severity and extent of cutaneous vasculitis were correlated with IENF densities. Patients with active lupus had even lower IENF densities than those with quiescent lupus (1.86 +/- 1.37 versus 4.15 +/- 2.20 fibres/mm, P = 0.0002). By linear regression analysis, IENF densities were negatively correlated with the SLE disease activity index (r = 0.527, P = 0.0002) and cumulative episodes of lupus flare-up within 2 years before the skin biopsy (r = 0.616, P = 0.0014). Clinically, skin denervation was present not only in the patients with sensory neuropathy but also in the patients with neuropsychiatric syndrome involving the CNS. SLE patients had significantly elevated warm threshold temperatures (P = 0.003) and reduced cold threshold temperatures (P = 0.048); elevated warm threshold temperatures were associated with the reduced IENF densities (P = 0.032). In conclusion, cutaneous vasculitis and lupus activities underlie skin denervation with associated elevation of thermal thresholds as a major manifestation of sensory nerve injury in SLE.


Subject(s)
Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/pathology , Skin Diseases, Vascular/pathology , Skin/innervation , Vasculitis/pathology , Adult , Aged , Biopsy , Electrophysiology , Female , Hot Temperature , Humans , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/complications , Male , Middle Aged , Nerve Fibers/pathology , Psychophysics , Sensory Thresholds , Severity of Illness Index , Skin Diseases, Vascular/etiology , Vasculitis/etiology
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