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Shape shifting pain: chronification of back pain shifts brain representation from nociceptive to emotional circuits

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TLDR
Brain representation for a constant percept, back pain, can undergo large-scale shifts in brain activity with the transition to chronic pain, and these observations challenge long-standing theoretical concepts regarding brain and mind relationships.
Abstract
Chronic pain conditions are associated with abnormalities in brain structure and function. Moreover, some studies indicate that brain activity related to the subjective perception of chronic pain may be distinct from activity for acute pain. However, the latter are based on observations from cross-sectional studies. How brain activity reorganizes with transition from acute to chronic pain has remained unexplored. Here we study this transition by examining brain activity for rating fluctuations of back pain magnitude. First we compared back pain-related brain activity between subjects who have had the condition for ∼2 months with no prior history of back pain for 1 year (early, acute/subacute back pain group, n = 94), to subjects who have lived with back pain for >10 years (chronic back pain group, n = 59). In a subset of subacute back pain patients, we followed brain activity for back pain longitudinally over a 1-year period, and compared brain activity between those who recover (recovered acute/sub-acute back pain group, n = 19) and those in which the back pain persists (persistent acute/sub-acute back pain group, n = 20; based on a 20% decrease in intensity of back pain in 1 year). We report results in relation to meta-analytic probabilistic maps related to the terms pain, emotion, and reward (each map is based on >200 brain imaging studies, derived from neurosynth.org). We observed that brain activity for back pain in the early, acute/subacute back pain group is limited to regions involved in acute pain, whereas in the chronic back pain group, activity is confined to emotion-related circuitry. Reward circuitry was equally represented in both groups. In the recovered acute/subacute back pain group, brain activity diminished in time, whereas in the persistent acute/subacute back pain group, activity diminished in acute pain regions, increased in emotion-related circuitry, and remained unchanged in reward circuitry. The results demonstrate that brain representation for a constant percept, back pain, can undergo large-scale shifts in brain activity with the transition to chronic pain. These observations challenge long-standing theoretical concepts regarding brain and mind relationships, as well as provide important novel insights regarding definitions and mechanisms of chronic pain.

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Building better biomarkers: brain models in translational neuroimaging

TL;DR: The state of translational neuroimaging is reviewed, an approach to developing brain signatures that can be shared, tested in multiple contexts and applied in clinical settings is outlined and a program of broad exploration followed by increasingly rigorous assessment of generalizability is outlined.
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TL;DR: Preclinical studies coupled with clinical pharmacologic and neuroimaging investigations have advanced the understanding of brain circuits that modulate pain and suggest that diminished descending inhibition is likely to be an important element in determining whether pain may become chronic.
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Nociception, pain, negative moods and behavior selection

TL;DR: This work deconstructs chronic pain into four distinct phases, each with specific mechanisms, and outlines current state of knowledge regarding these mechanisms: the limbic brain imparting risk, and the mesolimbic learning processes reorganizing the neocortex into a chronic pain state.
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TL;DR: How recent progress in understanding of individual differences in intrinsic attention to pain and neural network dynamics in chronic pain can facilitate development of personalized pain therapies is described and the concept of a dynamic 'pain connectome' in the brain is introduced.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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