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Papers of the Week


Papers: 10 Aug 2019 - 16 Aug 2019


Human Studies


2019 Dec


Pain


160


12

Whole-brain functional network disruption in chronic pain with disc herniation.

Authors

Huang S, Wakaizumi K, Wu B, Shen B, Wu B, Fan L, Baliki MN, Zhan G, Apkarian VA, Huang L
Pain. 2019 Dec; 160(12):2829-2840.
PMID: 31408051.

Abstract

Brain functional network properties are globally disrupted in multiple musculoskeletal chronic pain conditions. Back pain with lumbar disc herniation is highly prevalent and a major route for progression to chronic back pain. However, brain functional network properties remain unknown in such patients. Here, we examined resting-state fMRI-based functional connectivity networks in chronic back pain patients with clear evidence for lumbar disc herniation (LDH-CP, n = 146), in comparison to healthy controls (HC, n = 165). The study was conducted in China, thus providing the opportunity to also examine the influence of culture on brain functional reorganization with chronic pain. The data was equally subdivided into Discovery and Validation subgroups (n = 68 LDH-CP and n = 68 HC, for each subgroup), and contrasted to an off-site dataset (n = 272, NITRC 1000).Graph disruption indices derived from three network topological measurements, degree, clustering coefficient, and efficiency, which respectively represent network hubness, segregation, and integration, were significantly decreased compared to HC, across all predefined link densities, in both Discovery and Validation groups. On the other hand, global mean clustering coefficient and betweenness centrality were decreased in the discovery group and showed trend in the validation group. The relationship between pain and graph disruption indices was limited to males with high education. These results deviate somewhat from recent similar analysis for other musculoskeletal chronic pain conditions, yet we cannot determine whether the differences are due to types of pain or also to cultural differences between patients studied in China and the USA.