AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: To examine whether cognitive behavioral treatments for insomnia (CBT-I) and pain (CBT-P) lead to neural activation changes in response to pain in fibromyalgia.

Methods: Thirty-two patients with fibromyalgia (mean age = 55.9, standard deviation = 12.2) underwent an experimental pain protocol during functional magnetic resonance imaging and completed 14-day diaries assessing total wake time, total sleep time, and pain intensity before and after CBT-I, CBT-P, or waitlist control. Random effects analysis of covariance identified regions with significant group (CBT-I, CBT-P, waitlist control) by time (baseline, post-treatment) interactions in blood oxygen level-dependent response to pain. Linear regressions using residualized change scores examined how changes in total wake time, total sleep time, and pain intensity were related to activation (blood oxygen level-dependent) changes.

Results: Twelve regions exhibited small to moderate effects with significant interactions s < .00; right hemisphere: inferior frontal, middle occipital, and superior temporal gyri, insula, lentiform nucleus; left hemisphere: angular, superior temporal, midfrontal, inferior occipital, midtemporal, and inferior frontal gyri. Blood oxygen level-dependent response to pain decreased in 8 regions following CBT-I, and in 3 regions following CBT-P (CBT-I effects > CBT-P). Blood oxygen level-dependent response also increased in 3 regions following CBT-P and in 6 regions following waitlist control. Improved total wake time and/or total sleep time, not pain intensity, predicted decreased blood oxygen level-dependence in 7 regions (s < .05), accounting for 18%-47% of the variance.

Conclusions: CBT-I prompted greater decreases in neural activation in response to pain across more regions associated with pain and sleep processing than CBT-P. Reported sleep improvements may underlie those decreases. Future research examining the longer-term impact of CBT-I and improved sleep on central pain and sleep mechanisms is warranted.

Clinical Trial Registration: Registry: ClinicalTrials.gov; Title: Sleep and Pain Interventions in Fibromyalgia (SPIN); Identifier: NCT02001077; URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02001077.

Citation: McCrae CS, Craggs JG, Curtis AF, et al. Neural activation changes in response to pain following cognitive behavioral therapy for patients with comorbid fibromyalgia and insomnia: a pilot study. . 2022;18(1):203-215.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8807905PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5664/jcsm.9540DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

response pain
24
blood oxygen
20
neural activation
16
oxygen level-dependent
16
pain
14
activation changes
12
changes response
12
cognitive behavioral
12
total wake
12
wake time
12

Similar Publications

Pain is closely linked to alpha oscillations (8 < 13 Hz) which are thought to represent a supra-modal, top-down mediated gating mechanism that shapes sensory processing. Consequently, alpha oscillations might also shape the cerebral processing of nociceptive input and eventually the perception of pain. To test this mechanistic hypothesis, we designed a sham-controlled and double-blind electroencephalography (EEG)-based neurofeedback study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It was previously shown that the original dipeptide mimetic of the 4th loop of neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) hexamethylenediamide bis-(N-monosuccinyl-L-asparaginyl-L-asparagine) (GTS-301), like the full-length neurotrophin, predominantly activates the tyrosine kinase receptor TrkC and has a neuroprotective effect in vitro at concentrations of 10-10 M, as well as antidiabetic (0.1 and 0.5 mg/kg) and antidepressant (5 and 10 mg/kg) effects after systemic administration in rodents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As short-track speed skaters have to race multiple races to achieve success during competition, optimizing the recovery between efforts is a noteworthy performance determinant. Therefore, we compared three different recovery modalities (active cycling recovery, pneumatic compression boots, and isocapnic breathing protocol) in the context of perceived subjective pain and recovery variables, multiple biochemical and biomechanical indices, CMJ height and power, as well as repeated efforts on the ice track. Fifteen elite short-track speed skaters (eight males and seven females; age 18.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Physical function in RA is largely influenced by multiple clinical factors, however, there is a growing body of evidence that psychological state and other comorbidities also play an essential role. Using data obtained in the COVID-19 Vaccination in Autoimmune Diseases study, an international self-reported e-survey, we aimed to explore the predictive ability of sociodemographic and clinical variables on Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Physical Function Short Form 10a (PROMIS PF-10a) in RA and to investigate variation in disease activity and functional outcomes based on country-level socio-economic parameters.

Methods: Patient demographics, disease characteristics including current symptom status, functional status and treatment variables, as well as income level of the country of residence, were extracted from survey responses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Holocord syringomyelia in 18 dogs.

Front Vet Sci

January 2025

Pride Veterinary Referrals, IVC Evidensia Group, Derby, United Kingdom.

Holocord syringomyelia (HSM) is characterized by a continuous spinal cord cavitation along its entire length and is currently poorly documented in dogs. This retrospective multicentric case series investigates the clinical and MRI findings in 18 dogs with HSM. The median age at presentation was 82 months (range 9-108 months) and French Bulldogs were overrepresented (50%).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!