Psychological and Neural Mechanisms of the Affective Dimension of Pain

The affective dimension of pain is made up of feelings of unpleasantness and emotions associated with future implications, termed secondary affect. Experimental and clinical studies show serial interactions between pain sensation intensity, pain unpleasantness, and secondary affect. These pain dimen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2000-06, Vol.288 (5472), p.1769-1772
1. Verfasser: Price, Donald D.
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description The affective dimension of pain is made up of feelings of unpleasantness and emotions associated with future implications, termed secondary affect. Experimental and clinical studies show serial interactions between pain sensation intensity, pain unpleasantness, and secondary affect. These pain dimensions and their interactions relate to a central network of brain structures that processes nociceptive information both in parallel and in series. Spinal pathways to limbic structures and medial thalamic nuclei provide direct inputs to brain areas involved in affect. Another source is from spinal pathways to somatosensory thalamic and cortical areas and then through a corticolimbic pathway. The latter integrates nociceptive input with contextual information and memory to provide cognitive mediation of pain affect. Both direct and corticolimbic pathways converge on the same anterior cingulate cortical and subcortical structures whose function may be to establish emotional valence and response priorities.
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Experimental and clinical studies show serial interactions between pain sensation intensity, pain unpleasantness, and secondary affect. These pain dimensions and their interactions relate to a central network of brain structures that processes nociceptive information both in parallel and in series. Spinal pathways to limbic structures and medial thalamic nuclei provide direct inputs to brain areas involved in affect. Another source is from spinal pathways to somatosensory thalamic and cortical areas and then through a corticolimbic pathway. The latter integrates nociceptive input with contextual information and memory to provide cognitive mediation of pain affect. 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subjects Affect - physiology
Afferent Pathways
Anatomical correlates of behavior
Animals
Behavioral psychophysiology
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Mapping
Cerebral Cortex - physiology
Compasses
Emotional distress
Emotional Disturbances
Emotional expression
Emotional states
Feedback (Response)
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Limbic System - physiology
Neurology
Nociceptive pain
Pain
Pain - physiopathology
Pain - psychology
Pain perception
Parietal Lobe - physiology
Patients
Persistence
Personality
Personality Traits
Physiological stimulation
Psychological aspects
Psychological Characteristics
Psychology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Reviews
Sensation
Somatosensory Cortex - physiology
Spinal Cord - physiology
Stimuli
Thalamic nuclei
Thalamic Nuclei - physiology
Tomography, Emission-Computed
title Psychological and Neural Mechanisms of the Affective Dimension of Pain
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