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Journal ArticleDOI

A pharmaco-fMRI study on pain networks induced by electrical stimulation after sumatriptan injection.

TLDR
In this paper, the responses of 12 healthy volunteers to electrical stimuli after infusion with either sumatriptan or saline were investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure brain activation in different areas during electrical stimulation.
Abstract
Sumatriptan, a drug widely used to alleviate migraine headaches, has several somatosensory adverse effects, including tactile allodynia. To understand whether sumatriptan affects sensory and affective circuitries simultaneously, we investigated the responses of 12 healthy volunteers to electrical stimuli after infusion with either sumatriptan or saline. Using a double-blind crossover study design, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure brain activation in different areas during electrical stimulation. The visual analog scale (VAS) and short-form McGill pain questionnaire (SF-MPQ) were used to rate stimulation-evoked sensations and affections after drug administration. VAS rating, SF-MPQ, and block fMRI were all performed in each subject during sumatriptan and saline injection. Echo-planar imaging sequences were used to determine the whole-brain blood oxygenation level-dependent signal of the entire brain. Our results showed that sumatriptan predominantly activated regions in the medial pain system and smaller regions in the lateral pain system. These regions included the secondary somatosensory cortex (SII), anterior insular cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, medial thalamus, cerebellar supravermis, dentate nucleus, and the majority of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). In contrast, activation following saline administration was observed primarily in the lateral pain system, including the primary sensory cortex, lateral SII, posterior insular cortex, anterior ACC, and lateral thalamus. Importantly, we found that VAS ratings and MPQ scores were increased after sumatriptan infusion, but not after saline administration. Our fMRI, VAS, and SF-MPQ findings suggest that sumatriptan plays a significant role in the affective dimension of pain and a minor role related to sensory discrimination.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The anterior cingulate cortex and pain processing

TL;DR: Recent data obtained using novel behavioral paradigms in animals based on measuring escape and/or avoidance of a noxious stimulus based on the nature of the neuroanatomical and neurochemical contributions of the anterior cingulate cortex to higher order pain processing in rodents are summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Insula A “Hub of Activity” in Migraine

TL;DR: The insula, a “cortical hub” buried within the lateral sulcus, is involved in a number of processes including goal-directed cognition, conscious awareness, autonomic regulation, interoception, and somatosensation and may serve as a model to study new potential clinical perspectives for migraine treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Altered brain structure and function associated with sensory and affective components of classic trigeminal neuralgia.

TL;DR: Multiple lines of evidence are provided supporting aberrant structural and functional patterns that are observed in patients with CTN, which may help to better understand the pathophysiology of CTN and facilitate the development of new therapies for this disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human models of pain for the prediction of clinical analgesia.

TL;DR: It is possible to identify pain models that reliably predict clinical analgesic drug efficacy in cost‐effective experimental settings, based on empirical evidence of agreement between drugs for their efficacy in experimental and clinical pain settings.
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The Orbitofrontal Cortex and Reward

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