• J. Neurosci. Methods · Jan 2018

    Comparative Study

    A comparison between the neural correlates of laser and electric pain stimulation and their modulation by expectation.

    • E J Hird, Jones A K P AKP Division of Neuroscience and Experimental Psychology, University of Manchester, M139GB, United Kingdom. Electronic address: anthony.jones@manchester.ac.uk, D Talmi, and W El-Deredy.
    • Division of Neuroscience and Experimental Psychology, University of Manchester, M139GB, United Kingdom. Electronic address: emily.hird@manchester.ac.uk.
    • J. Neurosci. Methods. 2018 Jan 1; 293: 117-127.

    BackgroundPain is modulated by expectation. Event-related potential (ERP) studies of the influence of expectation on pain typically utilise laser heat stimulation to provide a controllable nociceptive-specific stimulus. Painful electric stimulation has a number of practical advantages, but is less nociceptive-specific. We compared the modulation of electric versus laser-evoked pain by expectation, and their corresponding pain-evoked and anticipatory ERPs.New MethodWe developed understanding of recognised methods of laser and electric stimulation. We tested whether pain perception and neural activity induced by electric stimulation was modulated by expectation, whether this expectation elicited anticipatory neural correlates, and how these measures compared to those associated with laser stimulation by eliciting cue-evoked expectations of high and low pain in a within-participant design.ResultsDespite sensory and affective differences between laser and electric pain, intensity ratings and pain-evoked potentials were modulated equivalently by expectation, though ERPs only correlated with pain ratings in the laser pain condition. Anticipatory correlates differentiated pain intensity expectation to laser but not electric pain.Comparison With Existing MethodPrevious studies show that laser-evoked potentials are modulated by expectation. We extend this by showing electric pain-evoked potentials are equally modulated by expectation, within the same participants. We also show a difference between the pain types in anticipation.ConclusionsThough laser-evoked potentials express a stronger relationship with pain perception, both laser and electric stimulation may be used to study the modulation of pain-evoked potentials by expectation. Anticipatory-evoked potentials are elicited by both pain types, but they may reflect different processes.Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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