4.6 Article

Functional Hyperconnectivity and Task-Based Activity Changes Associated With Neuropathic Pain After Spinal Cord Injury: A Pilot Study

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.613630

Keywords

functional connectivity; resting-state fMRI; task-based fMRI; functional magnetic resonance imaging; fMRI; spinal cord injury; neuropathic pain

Funding

  1. University of Utah Neuroscience Initiative
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program [1747505]
  3. NIH [UH3NS095554]
  4. NIH S10 grant [1S10OD021644-01A1]
  5. Biomedical Imaging and Data Science Core at the University of Utah

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Neuropathic pain is a chronic pain condition affecting a large population of spinal cord injury patients, with poorly understood neurophysiological mechanisms. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest differential patterns of functional activity in patients with neuropathic pain. Analysis using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and high-resolution resting state fMRI revealed significant differences in functional activation and connectivity in the brains of neuropathic pain patients compared to non-painful patients within the spinal cord injury cohort.
Neuropathic pain (NP) is a devastating chronic pain condition affecting roughly 80% of the spinal cord injury (SCI) patient population. Current treatment options are largely ineffective and neurophysiological mechanisms of NP are not well-understood. Recent studies in neuroimaging have suggested that NP patients have differential patterns of functional activity that are dependent upon the neurological condition causing NP. We conducted an exploratory pilot study to examine functional activation and connectivity in SCI patients with chronic NP compared to SCI patients without NP. We developed a novel somatosensory attention task to identify short term fluctuations in neural activity related to NP vs. non-painful somatosensation using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We also collected high-resolution resting state fMRI to identify connectivity-based correlations over time between the two groups. We observed increased activation during focus on NP in brain regions associated with somatosensory integration and representational knowledge in pain subjects when compared with controls. Similarly, NP subjects showed increased connectivity at rest in many of the same areas of the brain, with positive correlations between somatomotor networks, the dorsal attention network, and regions associated with pain and specific areas of painful and non-painful sensation within our cohort. Although this pilot analysis did not identify statistically significant differences between groups after correction for multiple comparisons, the observed correlations between NP and functional activation and connectivity align with a priori hypotheses regarding pain, and provide a well-controlled preliminary basis for future research in this severely understudied patient population. Altogether, this study presents a novel task, identifies regions of increased task-based activation associated with NP after SCI in the insula, prefrontal, and medial inferior parietal cortices, and identifies similar regions of increased functional connectivity associated with NP after SCI in sensorimotor, cingulate, prefrontal, and inferior medial parietal cortices. This, along with our complementary results from a structurally based analysis, provide multi-modal evidence for regions of the brain specific to the SCI cohort as novel areas for further study and potential therapeutic targeting to improve outcomes for NP patients.

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