Favorite Music Mediates Pain-related Responses in the Anterior Cingulate Cortex and Skin Pain Thresholds

Music therapy is widely used to enhance well-being, reduce pain, and distract patients from unpleasant symptoms in the clinical setting. However, the degree to which music modulates pain perception is unknown. The medial pain pathway including the limbic system is associated with emotion, but how mu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pain research 2020-01, Vol.13, p.2729-2737
Hauptverfasser: Antioch, Iulia, Furuta, Tsumugu, Uchikawa, Ryutaro, Okumura, Masayo, Otogoto, Junichi, Kondo, Eiji, Sogawa, Norio, Ciobica, Alin, Tomida, Mihoko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Music therapy is widely used to enhance well-being, reduce pain, and distract patients from unpleasant symptoms in the clinical setting. However, the degree to which music modulates pain perception is unknown. The medial pain pathway including the limbic system is associated with emotion, but how music alters pathway activity is unclear. The aim of the study was to investigate pain thresholds and pain-related responses in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and whether they were modulated when subjects listened to their favorite music genre. First, 30 subjects were examined for left forearm pain threshold using electrical stimulation with Pain Vision PS-2011N. The pain thresholds with and without music were compared. Second, when an 80-μA current from Pain Vision was applied to the left ankle of eight women, the pain-related responses of the ACC with and without music were observed with functional magnetic resonance device (fMRI). The changes in the pain-related activity in both parameters were discussed. The median pain threshold with favorite music was 38.9 μA, compared to 29.0 μA without, which was significantly different (
ISSN:1178-7090
1178-7090
DOI:10.2147/jpr.s276274