Psychiatry research
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Psychiatry research · Aug 2010
Functional magnetic resonance imaging response to experimental pain in drug-free patients with schizophrenia.
Clinical evidence suggests that there is decreased pain sensitivity in schizophrenia; however, the neurobiological mechanism of this decrease remains unknown. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we examined the blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) changes induced by experimental pain-tolerance (endure) hot stimuli vs. non-painful stimuli during an acute psychotic episode in 12 drug-free patients with schizophrenia and in 13 gender- and age-matched healthy controls. The analyses revealed that patients showed a greater BOLD response at S1 compared with controls but a reduced BOLD response in the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), insula, and brainstem during pain-tolerance stimuli. ⋯ S1 BOLD response positively correlated with unpleasantness in patients but not in controls. These initial results confirm that unmedicated patients with schizophrenia have a higher pain tolerance than controls, decreased activation in pain affective-cognitive processing regions (insula, PCC, brainstem), and an over-activation of the primary sensory-discriminative pain processing region (S1). These pilot results are the first to explore the mechanism driving altered pain sensitivity in schizophrenia.