fMRI reveals relationship between depression and pain
The brains of individuals with major depressive disorder
appear to react more strongly when anticipating pain and also display altered
functioning of the neural network that modifies pain sensitivity, according to
a report in the November issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
"Chronic pain and depression are common and often overlapping
syndromes," the authors write as background information in the article. Recurring
or chronic pain occurs in more than 75 percent of patients with depression, and
between 30 percent and 60 percent of patients with chronic pain report symptoms
of depression "Understanding the neurobiological basis of this relationship is
important because the presence of comorbid pain contributes significantly to poorer
outcomes and increased cost of treatment in major depressive disorder."
Irina A. Strigo, Ph.D., of the University of California
San Diego, La Jolla, and colleagues studied 15 young adults with major depressive
disorder (average age 24.5) who were not taking medication and 15 individuals
who were the same age (average 24.3 years) and had the same education level but
did not have depression. Patients with depression completed a questionnaire that
evaluated their tendencies to magnify, ruminate over or feel helpless in the face
of pain. All participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
while their arms were exposed to a thermal device heated to painful levels (an
average of 46.4 degrees to 46.9 degrees Celsius, or about 115 degrees to 116 degrees
Fahrenheit) and also to non-painful temperatures. Visual cues (a green shape for
non-painful warmth and a red shape for painful warmth) were presented before the
heat was applied.
Compared with the controls, patients with depression
showed increased activation in certain areas of their brain-including the right
amygdala-during the anticipation of painful stimuli. They also displayed increased
activation in the right amygdala and decreased activation in other areas, including
those responsible for pain modulation, during the painful experience.
To examine whether the activation of the amygdala was
associated with passive coping styles, the researchers compared the percentage
change in the activations of the amygdala with the helplessness, rumination and
ramification reported by the participants with depression. "Significant positive
correlations were observed in the major depressive disorder group between greater
helplessness scores and greater activity in the right amygdala during the anticipation
of pain," the authors write.
"The anticipatory brain response may indicate hypervigilance
to impending threat, which may lead to increased helplessness and maladaptative
modulation during the experience of heat pain," the authors write. "This mechanism
could in part explain the high comorbidity of pain and depression when these conditions
become chronic."
"Future studies that directly examine whether maladaptive
response to pain in major depressive disorder is due to emotional allodynia, maladaptive
control responses, lack of resilience and/or ineffectual recruitment of positive
energy resources will further our understanding of pain-depression comorbidity,"
they conclude.
This study was supported by Barrow Neurological Foundation,
grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Association
for Research in Schizophrenia and Depression and the University of California
San Diego Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health.
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