4.5 Article

Effect of odor pleasantness on heat-induced pain: An fMRI study

Journal

BRAIN IMAGING AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 1300-1312

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11682-020-00328-0

Keywords

Pain; Olfaction; Emotion; fMRI; Functional connectivity

Categories

Funding

  1. RWTH Aachen University (ERS Seed Funds) [OPSF432]
  2. German Research Foundation [IRTG 2150, 368482240/GRK 2416, RO 4046/2-1, RO 4046/2-2]
  3. Interdisciplinary Centre for Clinical Research within the faculty of Medicine at the RWTH Aachen University [IZKF TN1-8/IA 532008]
  4. Brain Imaging Facility of the Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research (IZKF) within the Faculty of Medicine at the RWTH Aachen University, Germany
  5. German Research Foundation under Germany's Excellence Strategy Science of Intelligence [EXC 2002/1, 390523135]

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This study used fMRI to investigate the mechanisms by which the brain modulates the pain experience under concurrent odorant stimulation, and found that the amygdalae play an important role in pain perception and exhibit functional couplings with other brain regions.
Odor modulates the experience of pain, but the neural basis of how the two sensory modalities, olfaction and pain, are linked in the central nervous system is far from clear. In this study, we investigated the mechanisms by which the brain modulates the pain experience under concurrent odorant stimulation. We conducted an fMRI study using a 2 x 3 factorial design, in which one of two temperatures (warm, hot) and one of three types of odors (pleasant, unpleasant, no odor) were presented simultaneously. Hot temperatures were individually determined as those perceived as painful (mean temperature = 46.9 degrees C). The non-painful warm temperature was set to 40 degrees C. Participants rated hot compared to warm stimuli as more intense and unpleasant, especially in the presence of an unpleasant odor. Parametric modeling on the intensity ratings activated the pain network, covering brain regions activated by the hot stimuli. The presence of an odor, irrespective of its valence, activated the amygdalae. In addition, the amygdalae showed stimulus-dependent functional couplings with the right supramarginal gyrus and with the left superior frontal gyrus. The coupling between the right amygdala and the left superior frontal gyrus was related to the intensity and unpleasantness ratings of the pain experience. Our results suggest that these functional connections may reflect the integrating process of the two sensory modalities, enabling olfactory influence on the pain experience.

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