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

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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 matrices and neuropathic pain matrices: A review

TL;DR: The pain matrix is conceptualised here as a fluid system composed of several interacting networks, including posterior parietal, prefrontal and anterior insular areas, which ensures the bodily specificity of pain and is the only one whose destruction entails selective pain deficits.
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Pain and consciousness.

TL;DR: It is contended that even in unconscious subjects, repeated limbic and vegetative activation by painful stimuli via spino‐amygdalar pathways can generate implicit memory traces and stimulus‐response abnormal sequences, possibly contributing to long‐standing anxiety or hyperalgesic syndromes in patients surviving coma.
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Heterogeneity of arousals in human sleep: A stereo-electroencephalographic study

TL;DR: The results suggest that the human cortex does not shift from sleep to wake in an abrupt binary way, and stereotyped arousals at the thalamic level seem to be associated with different patterns of cortical arousals due to various regulation factors.
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Concussion/mild traumatic brain injury-related chronic pain in males and females: A diagnostic modelling study.

TL;DR: Examining the multidimensional construct of pain in concussion/mTBI through a sex lens garners new directions for future longitudinal research on the pain mechanisms involved in postconcussion syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pain and sleep: from reaction to action.

TL;DR: This patient exhibited finger lifts in response to stimulations delivered during paradoxical (REM) sleep, suggesting that during PS, not only the processing of sensory inputs but also the capacity for the sleeper to intentionally indicate his perception could be preserved under particular circumstances is suggested.
References
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TL;DR: In his Perspective, Steriade traces the history of this field and discusses the significance of these results, which show how signals from this area, the midbrain reticular formation, change the physiology of the cortex, the part of the brain that governs higher functions.
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The role of the insular cortex in temporal lobe epilepsy.

TL;DR: The fact that seizures originating in the insular cortex are not influenced by temporal lobectomy is likely to explain some of the failures of this surgical procedure in TLE.
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Attention to pain localization and unpleasantness discriminates the functions of the medial and lateral pain systems.

TL;DR: The results indicate the importance of attentional effects on the pattern of nociceptive processing in the brain and provide the first clear demonstration, within a single experiment, of a major division of function within the neural pain matrix.
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The Spinothalamic System Targets Motor and Sensory Areas in the Cerebral Cortex of Monkeys

TL;DR: The meta-analysis of imaging studies indicates that the human equivalents of the three cingulate motor areas also correspond to sites of pain-related activation, indicating that the substrate exists for the ST system to have an important influence on the cortical control of movement.
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