PAIN
Volume 130, Issue 1 , Pages 137-143, July 2007

Descending analgesia – When the spine echoes what the brain expects

  • Philippe Goffaux

      Affiliations

    • Université de Sherbrooke, Faculté de Médecine, Sherbrooke, Que., Canada J1H 5N4
  • ,
  • William John Redmond

      Affiliations

    • Université de Sherbrooke, Faculté de Médecine, Sherbrooke, Que., Canada J1H 5N4
  • ,
  • Pierre Rainville

      Affiliations

    • Université de Montréal, Faculté de Médecine Dentaire, Montréal, Que., Canada H3C 3J7
  • ,
  • Serge Marchand

      Affiliations

    • Université de Sherbrooke, Faculté de Médecine, Sherbrooke, Que., Canada J1H 5N4
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 819 346 1110x15889; fax: +1 819 564 5424.

Received 21 June 2006; received in revised form 12 November 2006; accepted 21 November 2006.

Abstract 

Changes in pain produced by psychological factors (e.g., placebo analgesia) are thought to result from the activity of specific cortical regions. However, subcortical nuclei, including the periaqueductal gray and the rostroventral medulla, also show selective activation when subjects expect pain relief. These brainstem regions send inhibitory projections to the spine and produce diffuse analgesic responses. Regrettably the precise contribution of spinal mechanisms in predicting the strength of placebo analgesia is unknown. Here, we show that expectations regarding pain radically change the strength of spinal nociceptive responses in humans. We found that contrary to expectations of analgesia, expectations of hyperalgesia completely blocked the analgesic effects of descending inhibition on spinal nociceptive reflexes. Somatosensory-evoked brain potentials and pain ratings further confirmed changes in spino-thalamo-cortical responses consistent with expectations and with changes in the spinal response. These findings provide direct evidence that the modulation of pain by expectations is mediated by endogenous pain modulatory systems affecting nociceptive signal processing at the earliest stage of the central nervous system. Expectation effects, therefore, depend as much about what takes place in the spine as they do about what takes place in the brain. Furthermore, complete suppression of the analgesic response normally produced by descending inhibition suggests that anti-analgesic expectations can block the efficacy of pharmacologically valid treatments which has important implications for clinical practice.

Keywords: Expectations, Withdrawal reflex, RIII, Spine, SEP, Brain, DNIC

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PII: S0304-3959(06)00643-9

doi:10.1016/j.pain.2006.11.011

PAIN
Volume 130, Issue 1 , Pages 137-143, July 2007