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From Pavlov to pain: How predictability affects the anticipation and processing of visceral pain in a fear conditioning paradigm.
Neuroimage. 2016 Apr 15; 130:104-114.N

Abstract

Conditioned pain-related fear may contribute to hyperalgesia and central sensitization, but this has not been tested for interoceptive, visceral pain. The underlying ability to accurately predict pain is based on predictive cue properties and may alter the sensory processing and cognitive-emotional modulation of pain thus exacerbating the subjective pain experience. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging study using painful rectal distensions as unconditioned stimuli (US), we addressed changes in the neural processing of pain during the acquisition of pain-related fear and subsequently tested if conditioned stimuli (CS) contribute to hyperalgesia and increased neural responses in pain-encoding regions. N=49 healthy volunteers were assigned to one of two groups and underwent 3T fMRI during acquisition of either differential fear conditioning (predictable) or non-contingent presentation of CS and US (unpredictable). During a subsequent test phase, pain stimuli signaled randomly by the CSs were delivered. For the acquisition, results confirmed differential conditioning in the predictable but not the unpredictable group. With regard to activation in response to painful stimuli, the unpredictable compared to the predictable group revealed greater activation in pain-encoding (somatosensory cortex, insula) and pain-modulatory (prefrontal and cingulate cortices, periaqueductal grey, parahippocampus) regions. In the test phase, no evidence of hyperalgesia or central sensitization was found, but the predictable group demonstrated enhanced caudate nucleus activation in response to CS(-)-signaled pain. These findings support that during fear conditioning, the ability to predict pain affects neural processing of visceral pain and alters the associative learning processes underlying the acquisition of predictive properties of cues signaling pain, but conditioned pain-related fear does not result in visceral hyperalgesia or central sensitization.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Immunobiology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany.Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Immunobiology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany.Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology and Neuroradiology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany; Centre for Radiology, Department of Neuroradiology, Gieβen and Marburg University Clinic, Germany.Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology and Neuroradiology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany.Clinic for Neurology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany.Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Immunobiology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany. Electronic address: sigrid.elsenbruch@uk-essen.de.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

26854560

Citation

Labrenz, Franziska, et al. "From Pavlov to Pain: How Predictability Affects the Anticipation and Processing of Visceral Pain in a Fear Conditioning Paradigm." NeuroImage, vol. 130, 2016, pp. 104-114.
Labrenz F, Icenhour A, Schlamann M, et al. From Pavlov to pain: How predictability affects the anticipation and processing of visceral pain in a fear conditioning paradigm. Neuroimage. 2016;130:104-114.
Labrenz, F., Icenhour, A., Schlamann, M., Forsting, M., Bingel, U., & Elsenbruch, S. (2016). From Pavlov to pain: How predictability affects the anticipation and processing of visceral pain in a fear conditioning paradigm. NeuroImage, 130, 104-114. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.01.064
Labrenz F, et al. From Pavlov to Pain: How Predictability Affects the Anticipation and Processing of Visceral Pain in a Fear Conditioning Paradigm. Neuroimage. 2016 Apr 15;130:104-114. PubMed PMID: 26854560.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - From Pavlov to pain: How predictability affects the anticipation and processing of visceral pain in a fear conditioning paradigm. AU - Labrenz,Franziska, AU - Icenhour,Adriane, AU - Schlamann,Marc, AU - Forsting,Michael, AU - Bingel,Ulrike, AU - Elsenbruch,Sigrid, Y1 - 2016/02/12/ PY - 2015/07/16/received PY - 2015/11/24/revised PY - 2016/01/16/accepted PY - 2016/2/9/entrez PY - 2016/2/9/pubmed PY - 2017/1/14/medline KW - Anticipation KW - Associative learning KW - Expectation KW - Fear conditioning KW - Predictability KW - Visceral pain SP - 104 EP - 114 JF - NeuroImage JO - Neuroimage VL - 130 N2 - Conditioned pain-related fear may contribute to hyperalgesia and central sensitization, but this has not been tested for interoceptive, visceral pain. The underlying ability to accurately predict pain is based on predictive cue properties and may alter the sensory processing and cognitive-emotional modulation of pain thus exacerbating the subjective pain experience. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging study using painful rectal distensions as unconditioned stimuli (US), we addressed changes in the neural processing of pain during the acquisition of pain-related fear and subsequently tested if conditioned stimuli (CS) contribute to hyperalgesia and increased neural responses in pain-encoding regions. N=49 healthy volunteers were assigned to one of two groups and underwent 3T fMRI during acquisition of either differential fear conditioning (predictable) or non-contingent presentation of CS and US (unpredictable). During a subsequent test phase, pain stimuli signaled randomly by the CSs were delivered. For the acquisition, results confirmed differential conditioning in the predictable but not the unpredictable group. With regard to activation in response to painful stimuli, the unpredictable compared to the predictable group revealed greater activation in pain-encoding (somatosensory cortex, insula) and pain-modulatory (prefrontal and cingulate cortices, periaqueductal grey, parahippocampus) regions. In the test phase, no evidence of hyperalgesia or central sensitization was found, but the predictable group demonstrated enhanced caudate nucleus activation in response to CS(-)-signaled pain. These findings support that during fear conditioning, the ability to predict pain affects neural processing of visceral pain and alters the associative learning processes underlying the acquisition of predictive properties of cues signaling pain, but conditioned pain-related fear does not result in visceral hyperalgesia or central sensitization. SN - 1095-9572 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/26854560/From_Pavlov_to_pain:_How_predictability_affects_the_anticipation_and_processing_of_visceral_pain_in_a_fear_conditioning_paradigm_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -