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Papers of the Week


Papers: 3 Oct 2020 - 9 Oct 2020

RESEARCH TYPE:
Psychology


2020 Oct 01


Neurosci Biobehav Rev

THE NEURAL CORRELATES OF PAIN-RELATED FEAR: A META-ANALYSIS COMPARING FEAR CONDITIONING STUDIES USING PAINFUL AND NON-PAINFUL STIMULI.

Authors

Biggs EE, Timmers I, Meulders A, Vlaeyen J W, Goebel R, Kaas AL
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2020 Oct 01.
PMID: 33011229.

Abstract

Compared to the field of anxiety research, the use of fear conditioning paradigms for studying chronic pain is relatively novel. Developments in identifying the neural correlates of pain-related fear are important for understanding the mechanisms underlying chronic pain and warrant synthesis to establish the state-of-the-art. Using effect-size signed differential mapping, this meta-analysis combined nine MRI studies and compared the overlap in these correlates of pain-related fear to those of other non-pain-related conditioned fears (55 studies). Pain-related fear was characterized by neural activation of the supramarginal gyrus, middle temporal gyrus, inferior/middle frontal gyri, frontal operculum and insula, pre-/post-central gyri, medial frontal and (para-)cingulate cortex, hippocampus, thalamus, and putamen. There were differences with other non-pain-related conditioned fears, specifically in the inferior frontal gyrus, medial superior frontal gyrus, post-central gyrus, middle temporal gyrus, parieto-occipital sulcus, and striatum. We conclude that pain-related and non-pain-related conditioned fears recruit overlapping but distinguishable networks, with potential implications for understanding the mechanisms underlying different psychopathologies.