Article

Different modalities of painful somatosensory stimulations affect anticipatory cortical processes: a high-resolution EEG study.

Dipartimento di Fisiologia Umana e Farmacologia, Università La Sapienza, Rome, Italy.
Brain Research Bulletin (impact factor: 2.82). 04/2007; 71(5):475-84. DOI:10.1016/j.brainresbull.2006.10.025 pp.475-84
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Pain sensation is characterized by multiple features that allow to differentiate pricking, burning, aching, stinging, and electrical shock. These features are sub-served by neural pathways that might give flexibility and selectivity to the cerebral anticipatory processes. In this line, the present high-resolution electroencephalography (EEG) study tested the hypothesis that the anticipatory cortical processes are stronger for painful thermal (biologically relevant) than electrical ("artificial") stimuli with similar intensity. EEG data (128 electrodes) were recorded in normal subjects during the expectancy of painful electrical or laser stimuli (visual omitted stimulus paradigm; interval between two painful stimuli: 16s), delivered over the median nerve region of the right arm (nonpainful stimuli as controls). After each stimulus, the subject reported the perceived stimulus intensity. Surface Laplacian estimation of the EEG data spatially enhanced the anticipatory stimulus-preceding negativity (SPN), which reflects motivational relevance of the stimulus. Subjects perceived no difference in the intensity of the electrical versus laser stimuli in both painful and nonpainful conditions. However, the anticipatory SPN appeared over large scalp regions before painful laser but not electrical stimulation. The same was true for the nonpainful stimulations. The present results suggest that the motivational anticipatory cortical processes are induced by nonpainful and painful biologically/ecologically relevant laser stimuli rather than by "artificial" electrical stimuli with similar intensity.

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Keywords

anticipatory cortical processes
 
anticipatory stimulus-preceding negativity
 
cerebral anticipatory processes
 
EEG data spatially
 
large scalp regions
 
median nerve region
 
motivational anticipatory cortical processes
 
neural pathways
 
nonpainful
 
nonpainful conditions
 
nonpainful stimulations
 
nonpainful stimuli
 
painful biologically/ecologically relevant laser stimuli
 
painful electrical
 
painful thermal
 
perceived stimulus intensity
 
present high-resolution electroencephalography
 
present results
 
reflects motivational relevance
 
Surface Laplacian estimation