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Wednesday December 5 5:01 PM ET
Study Finds
Pain and Pleasure
Linked in Brain
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent
WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- Pain and pleasure may be closer sensations than anyone
thought, researchers said on Wednesday.
They found the two often activate the same circuits in
the brain -- suggesting that the responses to pain and
pleasure are similar.
The findings may open ways to better treat pain and also
increase understanding of how the brain works, said Dr.
David Borsook of Massachusetts General Hospital, who
led the study.
They may also offer an objective way to measure what
is now an intensely personal sensation.
"Pain is not just a sensory experience -- 'I feel
it here so and just this much' -- but it is also an
emotional experience. It is that emotional experience
that has been hard to capture or define," Borsook
said in a telephone interview.
"By defining this circuitry we believe we now are
in a position to understand what in a chronic pain patient
is their bigger problem, and this is their emotional reaction
to pain. They are anxious, they don't eat as much, they
become depressed, even suicidal."
Borsook's team used technology that allows scientists see
the brain in action. They took functional MRI images of
the brains of eight healthy young men while running
various tests.
In one, a small heat pad was attached to the hands of
the volunteers. The researchers heated it to either a
pleasantly warm 106 degrees F (41 degrees C) or a painful
115 degrees (46 degrees C).
Painfully hot temperatures activated not only areas long
associated with pain in the brain, but also areas previously
believed to involve "reward" circuitry, the
researchers reported in the Dec. 6 issue of the journal Neuron.
In some of the structures associated with reward -- areas
known to be activated by cocaine, food and money -- the
pattern was different from that caused by pleasurable rewards.
There was also a variation in the response over time.
"These are two brain systems that were never associated
in the past, and it's the first time that we have seen
something aversive activating these reward structures,"
Lino Becerra, who worked on the study, said in a statement.
Borsook said something more complex than a simple positive
or negative response may be going on. "It may be that
these circuits previously described as handling reward are
actually analyzing stimuli and judging which are important
to survival," he said.
"I'm hopeful that these results will help us understand
how chronic pain produces changes in the brains of patients.
For example, many chronic pain patients report that they cannot
enjoy any pleasurable experience... This interaction of brain
systems also may explain why patients can take opioid drugs
for pain without becoming addicted."
Borsook, who has studied chronic pain for 15 years, said
the experiment might also show ways for doctors to use
functional MRI to objectively measure pain -- and to
measure whether pain drugs are working. "One of
the big, big problems in pain treatment is that we don't
have the equivalent, for many pain conditions, of an
antibiotic -- where you can test for sensitivity and
then you give it and the chances are ... that pneumonia
or whatever will disappear," he said.
It should also help in the design of better pain drugs.
"Current therapies are essentially based on folklore
-- opioids and aspirins," he said. "We don't
even know how they work."
Borsook said the findings may also explain the unusual
response of masochists to pain, although he stressed this
was not his particular goal. "Clearly if sadism and
masochism represents something in the chemical makeup
of a person."
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