4.4 Article

Sex Differences in the Neural Representation of Pain Unpleasantness

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 867-877

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2014.05.004

Keywords

Sex differences; pain unpleasantness; brain; somatosensory-evoked brain potential; source localization

Funding

  1. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Sante
  2. Canada Chair program
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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Sex differences in pain perception are still poorly understood, but they may be related to the way the brains of men and women respond to the affective dimensions of pain. Using a matched pain intensity paradigm, where pain intensity was kept constant across participants but pain unpleasantness was left free to vary among participants, we studied the relationship between pain unpleasantness and pain-evoked brain activity in healthy men and women separately. Experimental pain was provoked using transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the sural nerve while pain-related brain activity was measured using somatosensory-evoked brain potentials with source localization. Cardiac responses to pain were also measured using electrocardiac recordings. Results revealed that subjective pain unpleasantness was strongly associated with increased perigenual anterior cingulate cortex activity in women, whereas it was strongly associated with decreased ventromedial prefrontal cortex activity in men. Only ventromedial prefrontal cortex deactivations in men were additionally associated with increased autonomic cardiac arousal. These results suggest that in order to deal with pain's objectionable properties, men preferentially deactivate prefrontal suppression regions, leading to the mobilization of threat-control circuits, whereas women recruit well-known emotion-processing areas of the brain. Perspective: This article presents neuroimaging findings demonstrating that subjective pain unpleasantness ratings are associated with different pain-evoked brain responses in men and women, which has potentially important implications regarding sex differences in the risk of developing chronic pain. (C) 2014 by the American Pain Society

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