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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Filtering the reality: Functional dissociation of lateral and medial pain systems during sleep in humans

TLDR
While the lateral operculo‐insular system subserving sensory analysis of somatic stimuli remained active during paradoxical‐REM sleep, mid‐anterior cingulate processes related to orienting and avoidance behavior were suppressed, explaining why nociceptive stimuli can be either neglected or incorporated into dreams without awakening the subject.
Abstract
Behavioral reactions to sensory stimuli during sleep are scarce despite preservation of sizeable cortical responses. To further understand such dissociation, we recorded intracortical field potentials to painful laser pulses in humans during waking and all-night sleep. Recordings were obtained from the three cortical structures receiving 95% of the spinothalamic cortical input in primates, namely the parietal operculum, posterior insula, and mid-anterior cingulate cortex. The dynamics of responses during sleep differed among cortical sites. In sleep Stage 2, evoked potential amplitudes were similarly attenuated relative to waking in all three cortical regions. During paradoxical, or rapid eye movements (REM), sleep, opercular and insular potentials remained stable in comparison with Stage 2, whereas the responses from mid-anterior cingulate abated drastically, and decreasing below background noise in half of the subjects. Thus, while the lateral operculo-insular system subserving sensory analysis of somatic stimuli remained active during paradoxical-REM sleep, mid-anterior cingulate processes related to orienting and avoidance behavior were suppressed. Dissociation between sensory and orienting-motor networks might explain why nociceptive stimuli can be either neglected or incorporated into dreams without awakening the subject.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pain, opioids, and sleep: implications for restless legs syndrome treatment

TL;DR: The results of this diprenorphine positron emission tomography study suggested that the more severe the RLS, the greater the release of endogenous opioids, which are considered an efficacious off-label therapy in patients with severe RLS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local sleep spindles in the human thalamus

TL;DR: It is shown that local spindles are indeed present in the human posterior thalamus and that the preferential association of local thalamic and cortical spindle supports the notion of thalamocortical loops functioning in a modular way.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep spindles and human cortical nociception: a surface and intracerebral electrophysiological study.

TL;DR: It is found that sleep spindles do not prevent arousal reactions to nociceptive stimuli and that autonomic reactivity to nOCiceptive inputs is not modulated by spindle activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asleep but aware

TL;DR: A patient was able, during paradoxical sleep, to reproduce a motor behaviour previously performed at wake to consciously indicate her perception of nociceptive stimulation, opening the way to further studies on the currently unknown capacity of the sleeping brain to interact meaningfully with its environment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Manual of Standardized Terminology, Techniques and Scoring System for Sleep Stages of Human Subjects.

TL;DR: Techniques of recording, scoring, and doubtful records are carefully considered, and Recommendations for abbreviations, types of pictorial representation, order of polygraphic tracings are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human brain mechanisms of pain perception and regulation in health and disease.

TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature regarding how activity in diverse brain regions creates and modulates the experience of acute and chronic pain states, emphasizing the contribution of various imaging techniques to emerging concepts is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pain affect encoded in human anterior cingulate but not somatosensory cortex.

TL;DR: These findings provide direct experimental evidence in humans linking frontal-lobe limbic activity with pain affect, as originally suggested by early clinical lesion studies.
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