Evoked oscillatory cortical activity during acute pain: Probing brain in pain by transcranial magnetic stimulation combined with electroencephalogram.
Enrico De MartinoAdenauer CasaliSilvia CasarottoGabriel HassanBruno Andry CoutoMario RosanovaThomas Graven-NielsenDaniel Ciampi de AndradePublished in: Human brain mapping (2024)
Temporal dynamics of local cortical rhythms during acute pain remain largely unknown. The current study used a novel approach based on transcranial magnetic stimulation combined with electroencephalogram (TMS-EEG) to investigate evoked-oscillatory cortical activity during acute pain. Motor (M1) and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) were probed by TMS, respectively, to record oscillatory power (event-related spectral perturbation and relative spectral power) and phase synchronization (inter-trial coherence) by 63 EEG channels during experimentally induced acute heat pain in 24 healthy participants. TMS-EEG was recorded before, during, and after noxious heat (acute pain condition) and non-noxious warm (Control condition), delivered in a randomized sequence. The main frequency bands (α, β1, and β2) of TMS-evoked potentials after M1 and DLPFC stimulation were recorded close to the TMS coil and remotely. Cold and heat pain thresholds were measured before TMS-EEG. Over M1, acute pain decreased α-band oscillatory power locally and α-band phase synchronization remotely in parietal-occipital clusters compared with non-noxious warm (all p < .05). The remote (parietal-occipital) decrease in α-band phase synchronization during acute pain correlated with the cold (p = .001) and heat pain thresholds (p = .023) and to local (M1) α-band oscillatory power decrease (p = .024). Over DLPFC, acute pain only decreased β1-band power locally compared with non-noxious warm (p = .015). Thus, evoked-oscillatory cortical activity to M1 stimulation is reduced by acute pain in central and parietal-occipital regions and correlated with pain sensitivity, in contrast to DLPFC, which had only local effects. This finding expands the significance of α and β band oscillations and may have relevance for pain therapies.
Keyphrases
- chronic pain
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- high frequency
- pain management
- neuropathic pain
- liver failure
- respiratory failure
- working memory
- drug induced
- magnetic resonance
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- magnetic resonance imaging
- clinical trial
- intensive care unit
- spinal cord
- hepatitis b virus
- molecular dynamics simulations
- optical coherence tomography
- postoperative pain
- open label
- high density
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- contrast enhanced
- phase ii