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- Christopher A Brown and Anthony Kp Jones.
- Human Pain Research Group, Clinical Sciences Building, Hope Hospital, Salford, M6 8HD, United Kingdom. christopher.brown@manchester.ac.uk
- Clin Neurophysiol. 2008 Oct 1;119(10):2370-9.
ObjectiveTo investigate the anticipatory neural processes associated with the interruptive effects of pain anticipation on attention.MethodsSustained attention was measured in healthy subjects (n=24) by the number of task errors in a go/no-go task involving temporal discrimination of non-painful cutaneous electrical stimuli. Painful distractors were randomly delivered to the same spatial location and the resulting increases in task errors (indicating interruption of attention) were measured. In a separate task the same subjects attended to the spatial location of painful laser stimuli delivered to the right forearm, and we localized the sources of anticipatory ERPs prior to stimulation.ResultsPain anticipation was associated with activation of pain matrix areas including bilateral insula, mid- and posterior cingulate cortices, and bilateral inferior parietal cortices. Subjects with greater pain-related increases in task errors found the pain to be more unpleasant, and showed increased early pain-related anticipatory processing in the midcingulate cortex. They also demonstrated reduced processing in a spatial attention network comprising posterior cingulate and inferior parietal cortices.ConclusionsThe results suggest a role for the midcingulate cortex in interrupting attention during pain anticipation.SignificanceIndividuals with greater anticipatory midcingulate responses may be predisposed to developing chronic pain and hypervigilance toward clinical pain symptoms.
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