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Cortical mapping of painful electrical stimulation by quantitative electroencephalography: unraveling the time-frequency-channel domain. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at how the brain reacts to pain from electrical stimulation by using special equipment that measures brain waves.
  • In the first part, ten people had a nerve stimulated while scientists recorded their brain activity with many sensors and different levels of stimulation.
  • The results showed that specific brain responses to pain could be measured at certain times, especially at 250 milliseconds after a painful shock, helping researchers understand how the brain deals with pain.

Article Abstract

The goal of this study was to capture the electroencephalographic signature of experimentally induced pain and pain-modulating mechanisms after painful peripheral electrical stimulation to determine one or a selected group of electrodes at a specific time point with a specific frequency range. In the first experiment, ten healthy participants were exposed to stimulation of the right median nerve while registering brain activity using 32-channel electroencephalography. Electrical stimulations were organized in four blocks of 20 stimuli with four intensities - 100%, 120%, 140%, and 160% - of the electrical pain threshold. In the second experiment, 15 healthy participants received electrical stimulation on the dominant median nerve before and during the application of a second painful stimulus. Raw data were converted into the time-frequency domain by applying a continuous wavelet transform. Separated domain information was extracted by calculating Parafac models. The results demonstrated that it is possible to capture a reproducible cortical neural response after painful electrical stimulation, more specifically at 250 milliseconds poststimulus, at the midline electrodes Cz and FCz with predominant δ-oscillations. The signature of the top-down nociceptive inhibitory mechanisms is δ-activity at 235 ms poststimulus at the prefrontal electrodes. This study presents a methodology to overcome the a priori determination of the regions of interest to analyze the brain response after painful electrical stimulation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5697445PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S145783DOI Listing

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