• Mol Pain · Jan 2019

    Abnormal reward system network in primary dysmenorrhea.

    • Qi Zhang, Siyi Yu, Yanan Wang, Minyu Wang, Ya Yang, Wei Wei, Xiaoli Guo, Fang Zeng, Fanrong Liang, and Jie Yang.
    • 1 Department of Acupuncture & Tuina, Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chengdu, China.
    • Mol Pain. 2019 Jan 1; 15: 17448069198620961744806919862096.

    AbstractNeuroimaging studies have demonstrated that reward system is associated with chronic pain diseases. In addition, previous studies have also demonstrated abnormal functional and structural brain regions in primary dysmenorrhea. However, the relation of reward system and primary dysmenorrhea is still unknown. Using the resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging, we aimed to investigate the functional connectivity changes of reward system during periovulatory phase in primary dysmenorrhea. Forty-one primary dysmenorrhea patients and 39 matched female healthy controls participated in this study. Compared to healthy controls, primary dysmenorrhea patients showed decreased connectivity of left nucleus accumbens with the bilateral anterior insula and the left amygdala and decreased connectivity of right nucleus accumbens with ventral tegmental area, the left hippocampus, the right orbital frontal cortex, and the right anterior insula. In addition, the decreased functional connectivity between the right nucleus accumbens-ventral tegmental area negatively correlated with the level of prostaglandin F2 alpha. Our findings provide neuroimaging evidence in support of the abnormal reward system connectivity in primary dysmenorrhea patients, which might contribute to a better understanding of the cerebral pathophysiology of primary dysmenorrhea.

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