Source: University Of Michigan Health System
Date Posted: 10/28/2002
Web Address: www.sciencedaily.com
ANN ARBOR, MI – Patients with lower back pain that can't be traced to a
specific physical cause may have abnormal pain-processing pathways in
their brains, according to a new study led by University of Michigan
researchers.
The effect, which as yet has no explanation, is similar to an altered
pain perception effect in fibromyalgia patients recently reported by the
same research team.
In fact, the study finds, people with lower back pain say they feel severe
pain, and have measurable pain signals in their brains, from a gentle
finger squeeze that barely feels unpleasant to people without lower back
pain. People with fibromyalgia felt about the same pain from a squeeze of
the same intensity.
But the squeeze's force must be increased sharply to cause healthy people
to feel the same level of pain -- and their pain signals register p in
different brain areas.
The results, which will be presented Oct. 27 at the annual meeting of the
American College of Rheumatology in New Orleans, may help lead researchers
to important findings on lower back pain, and on enhanced pain perception
in general.
Senior authors Richard Gracely, Ph.D., and Daniel Clauw, M.D., did the
study at Georgetown University Medical Center and the National Institutes
of Health, but are now continuing the work at the University of Michigan
Health System. In May, they and their colleagues published a paper in the
journal Arthritis and Rheumatism on pain perception in fibromyalgia
patients.
To correlate subjective pain sensation with objective views of brain
signals, the researchers used a super-fast form of MRI brain imaging,
called functional MRI or fMRI. They looked at the brains of 15 people with
lower back pain whose body scans showed no mechanical cause, such as a
ruptured disk, for their pain. They also looked at 15 fibromyalgia
patients and 15 normal control subjects.
As a result, they say, the study offers the first objective method for
corroborating what lower back pain patients report they feel, and what's
going on in their brains at the precise moment they feel it. And, it
continues to give researchers a road map of the areas of the brain that
are most -- and least -- active when patients feel pain. The researchers
hope that further study on larger groups of patients will yield more
information on altered pain processing.
"The fMRI technology gave us a unique opportunity to look at the
neurobiology underlying tenderness, which is a hallmark of both lower back
pain and fibromyalgia," says Clauw. "These results, combined with other
work done by our group and others, have convinced us that some pathologic
process is making these patients more sensitive. For some reason, still
unknown, there's a neurobiological amplification of their pain signals."
Lower back pain affects nearly all Americans from time to time, especially
those who are overweight, sedentary or work in physically demanding jobs.
The pain can interfere with life and work; problems stemming from lower
back pain are the second most frequent cause of lost work days in adults
under the age of 45, ranking below only the common cold.
Much of the pain may be due to pulled muscles, strained ligaments, damaged
joints or small tears in the disks that act as cushions between the bones
of the spine -- all causes that don't show up well on X-rays but often can
be seen on CT or conventional MRI scans. These physical causes often
disappear after a few weeks, but many patients have chronic or recurring
lower-back pain.
In the study, the lower-back pain patients were examined by CT scan to
rule out mechanical causes of their pain. Then they, the fibromyalgia
patients and the healthy control subjects had their brains scanned by fMRI
for more than 10 minutes while a small, piston-controlled device applied
precisely calibrated, rapidly pulsing pressure to the base of their left
thumbnail. The pressures were varied over time, using painful and
non-painful levels that had been set for each patient prior to the scan.
The study's design gave two opportunities to compare patients and
controls. The subjective comparison measured the pressure levels at which
the pain rating given by back pain patients, fibromyalgia patients and
control subjects was the same. The objective comparison looked at the
rating that the three types of participants gave when the same level of
pressure was applied.
The researchers found that it only took a mild pressure to produce
self-reported feelings of pain in the lower-back pain and fibromyalgia
patients, while the control subjects tolerated the same pressure with
little pain.
"In both the back pain patients and the fibromyalgia patients, that same
mild pressure also produced measurable brain responses in areas that
process the sensation of pain," says Clauw. "But the same kind of brain
responses weren't seen in control subjects until the pressure on their
thumb increased substantially."
Though brain activity increased in many of the same areas in both patients
and control subjects, there were striking differences, too. All the
subjects had increased activity in eight areas of their brains, but
lower-back pain patients showed no increased activity in two areas that
were active in both fibromyalgia patients and normal control subjects.
Meanwhile, fibromyalgia patients showed increased activation in two other
areas not active in back pain patients and healthy subjects.
This response suggests that lower-back pain patients have enhanced
response to pain in some brain regions, and a diminished response in
others, Clauw says.
The study was supported in part by the National Fibromyalgia Research
Association, the U.S. Army and the NIH. In addition to Clauw and Gracely,
the research team included Thorsten Giesecke and Masilo Grant of UMHS,
Karen Munoz of NIH, Reshma Kumar of Georgetown, and Alf Nachemson of the
University of Gotenberg, Sweden.
Kevin Hogan is the author of eleven books, including the New Hypnotherapy Handbook.
Kevin Hogan
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