Cortical activity during the wind-up of flexion reflex and pain: a magnetoencephalographic study using time-frequency analysis

Author:

Taniguchi Tomoya1ORCID,Kinukawa Tomoaki Alex1ORCID,Takeuchi Nobuyuki2ORCID,Sugiyama Shunsuke3ORCID,Nishihara Makoto4ORCID,Kida Tetsuo56ORCID,Nishiwaki Kimitoshi1ORCID,Inui Koji56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine , Nagoya 467-8601 , Japan

2. Neuropsychiatric Department, Aichi Medical University , Nagakute 480-1131 , Japan

3. Department of Psychiatry, Gifu University , Gifu 501-1194 , Japan

4. Multidisciplinary Pain Center, Aichi Medical University , Nagakute 480-1131 , Japan

5. Department of Functioning and Disability, Institute for Developmental Research, Aichi Developmental Disability Center , Kasugai 480-0304 , Japan

6. Department of Integrative Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences , Okazaki 444-8585 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract Wind-up is a nociceptive-specific phenomenon in which pain sensations are facilitated, in a frequency-dependent manner, by the repeated application of noxious stimuli of constant intensity, with invariant tactile sensations. Thus, cortical activities during wind-up could be an alteration associated with pain potentiation. We aimed to investigate somatosensory-evoked cortical responses and induced brain oscillations during wind-up by recording magnetoencephalograms. Wind-up was produced by the application of 11 consecutive electrical stimuli to the sural nerve, repeated at a frequency of 1 Hz without varying the intensity. The augmentation of flexion reflexes and pain rating scores were measured simultaneously as an index of wind-up. In the time-frequency analyses, the γ-band late event-related synchronization and the β-band event-related desynchronization were observed in the primary somatosensory region and the bilateral operculo-insular region, respectively. Repetitive exposure to the stimuli enhanced these activities, along with an increase in the flexion reflex magnitude. The evoked cortical activity reflected novelty, with no alteration to these repetitive stimuli. Observed oscillations enhanced by repetitive stimulation at a constant intensity could reflect a pain mechanism associated with wind-up.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Cooperative Study Program

National Institute for Physiological Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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