Table 3

Examples fMRI Studies of Surrogate Models of Pain

STUDY FOCUS
REFERENCE
MAJOR FINDINGS
COMMENT

Experimental Allodynia



Capsaicin induced secondary hyperalgesia
Baron et al., 1999 [81]
9 Subjects. Capsaicin injection induced secondary mechanical hyperalgesia. Painful mechanical stimulation produced activation in prefrontal cortex >> than in nonpainful mechanical stimulation
First fMRI study of capsaicin induced hypersensitivity. Activation in prefrontal cortex = attention and cogniitvie changes (e.g., planning).
Brainstem activation by capsaicin
Zambreanu et al., 2005 [82]
Heat-capsaicin model used. Punctate mechanical stimuli applied to region of secondary hyperalgesia. Stimuli in hyperalgesic vs. control region showed activation in contralateral brainstem, cerebellum, bilateral thalamus, contralateral SI and SII, middle frontal gyrus, parietal association cortex and brainstem (cuneiformis, superior colliculi, PAG.
First evaluation of contribution of brainstem in central sensitization.
Cognitive influences on hyperalgesia
Wiech et al., 2005. [83]
Capsaicin-induced heat hyperalgesia results in frontal and medial prefrontal cortex, insula, and cerebellum. Activity in medial prefrontal cortex and cerebellum modulated by cognitive task.
Study addresses interaction between motivational and cognitive functions and may provide some basis for evaluating similar changes in chronic pain.
Capsaicin allodynia
Maihofner et al., 2004. [39]
Region of allodynia produced by capsaicin and thermal kindling. Brush to normal skin results in SI, parietal association cortex, SII bilaterally, contralateral insula. Brush to allodynic skin resulted in some overlap to those observed for control in addition to inferior frontal cortex, and ipsilateral insula.
Subtraction (unaffected vs. affected skin) indicates that mechanical allodynia in regions that include SI, parietal association cortex, inferior frontal cortex, and insula.

Definitions of terms in Table 3:

Allodynia – pain to a normally non-noxious stimulus.

Central Sensitization – increased sensitivity or excitability in central pain pathways as a result of increase in sensitivity/activation of these neural systems

Hyperalgesia – An increased response to a stimulus that is normally painful

Secondary Hyperalgesia – pain outside of the area of the primary injury.

Borsook and Becerra Molecular Pain 2006 2:30   doi:10.1186/1744-8069-2-30